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Devin McCloud wrote: » With that said, if 1000 people hit my site at the same time, does this mean the 1000th person would receive their page 1000 seconds later?
Devin McCloud wrote: » Can someone clarify this, I am having trouble understanding this concept. If so what is a good upload speed for a site to serve fast page views if say someone posted my site on digg or youtube.
the_Grinch wrote: » Also check your terms of service as you might not be allowed to host a webserver on your connection.
JavonR wrote: » I second that, most ISP's will flip a brick if they find out you have a web server .
You'll need to get a "real" host if you're expecting traffic from Digg. Budget hosts will crumble under the load.
Also check your terms of service as you might not be allowed to host a webserver on your connection.
Devin McCloud wrote: » Well thanks for all the advice. I am a little disappointed considering Mark Frind of plentyoffish dating site gets 500 million page views a month and runs his servers out of his own home. Maybe his story is made up. I don't know. I kinda had the pipe dream that it could be done successfully from my house with my servers and a business line. I guess tomorrow I will call my isp and just see what their upload speed and cost is for these lines.
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astorrs wrote: » Mishra/kalebksp, I can't agree with you guys. Given that hosting packages sufficient for a "starter" can be picked up for ~$5-8/mo (think Hostmonster, etc) and most ISPs charge you at least that for a static IP (if they even allow it without upgrading to SOHO/SMB plans) to me the numbers just don't add up.
Well of course if you don't have any interest in learning the web server itself then you should definitely not start it at home. I assume anyone on this board interested in having a website at home would be also getting a learning experience as well.
Given that hosting packages sufficient for a "starter" can be picked up for ~$5-8/mo
Devin McCloud wrote: » What do you really get with a $5 or a $15 hosting package? Is it really any better then my 300K upload cable connection?
Devin McCloud wrote: » Don't they cap those connections and limit the bandwidth per month.
Devin McCloud wrote: » I called around and a business line runs $95 for 20mbps down and 1Mb upload. Another option is $195 for 20Mbps down and 1.5 Mbps upload.
Devin McCloud wrote: » My goal was to test adsense and try take a CSS purist attempt at creating a lite weight site and testing it. Mishra I think your right on, it can't hurt and in the process I learn a lot of experience and what it takes to manage and protect a site. I also don't have to pay for anything but a domain name. I can always move up to a higher connection down the road.
kalebksp wrote: » I don't really want people running stress testing tools against my server, but if you point me to the tool you're talking about I'd be happy to run it. I'd be interested to see the comparison myself
The Microsoft WAS web stress tool is designed to realistically simulate multiple browsers requesting pages from a web site. You can use this tool to gather performance and stability information about your web application. This tool simulates a large number of requests with a relatively small number of client machines. The goal is to create an environment that is as close to production as possible so that you can find and eliminate problems in the web application prior to deployment.
JavonR wrote: » If you are still serious about doing it at home I would recommend getting between a 3-5mb upload, which is very difficult if not impossible to get out of a standard cable modem or dsl line. - again, this is just not smart.
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