Thanks for thinking of that Chad. I tend to cater to small business accounts and developers, which is why the quotas are set the way they are. I have only one site on my whole system that's nudging the quota limits (which is another reason why I can be flexible about space and bandwidth - no one's using all the space they've been allocated).
But if anyone wants bigger than that, hell I can work out a deal! Cheers Mike Kear Windsor, NSW, Australia Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer AFP Webworks http://afpwebworks.com ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month On Thu, 17 Mar 2005 11:51:03 +1100, Chad <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > You get 'em Mike. Grrr... ;) > > Please keep in mind that I was looking around the 400 Meg mark and the > grid is designed for my needs (incl. SQL 2K). For 400 Meg and decent > SQL DB and bandwidth, the prices ranged from $1100 to $1900 per year. > > Mike, I didn't get a chance to chase you on higher space, as your site > only specified max 100 Meg. Calculating the jump between your 50 Meg > and 100 Meg plans at around $180 annual per add'l 50 meg, you were on > the high side at $1680 per annum for 400 Meg. Factor in a price break > and that puts you in with the rest. > > Apples to apples folks. > > Chad > Who thinks business recommendations on lists are good, but customer > relationship management on lists is just good entertainment. > > -----Original Message----- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Mike Kear > Sent: Thursday, 17 March 2005 10:49 AM > To: CFAussie Mailing List > Subject: [cfaussie] Re: ColdFusion MX 7 Enterprise hosting required > > Peter, if you want to pay me $60/$90 a month per site, like you would at > Atomic Media, we might move a little earlier on upgrading too. > > And just to clarify, since apparently you weren't paying attentoin > last night when we discussed this, we're not going to upgrade to a > new version until it's had the chance to settle down and if any bugs > appear, they get fixed in an updater. > > Remember ours are production servers and we arent going to rush headlong > to go to new versions until we are sure there are no adverse > impacts from it. You were with us when we had that god-awful time a > couple of years back when nothing seemed to go right. You dont want to > go back to that do you? No? Well lets not be in too much of a > rush. Lets just tread carefully, and see how CF7 goes. So far it's > looking pretty good. > > And on a business level, we need to make sure we're going to get our > money back from the investment. You have a pretty sweet deal right > now, and if you want to pay more, (like in your case a LOT more) that > might change some of the business parameters. > > But be careful about how you say things. To say "my host isnt going > to upgrade any time soon" is misleading. I've been carefully > evaluating CFMX7 since the day it came out. A HUGE black mark was > the 10 days of difficulty I had in getting it installed. I have to > pause to consider whether such problems are isolated to that one machine > or perhaps we might have similar issues on the production machines? > SHUDDER!!!!! > > As soon as I think it makes sense from all considerations, it'll happen. > Not one second earlier. > > Cheers > Mike Kear > Windsor, NSW, Australia > Certified Advanced ColdFusion Developer > AFP Webworks > http://afpwebworks.com > ColdFusion, PHP, ASP, ASP.NET hosting from AUD$15/month > -- --- You are currently subscribed to cfaussie as: [email protected] To unsubscribe send a blank email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] Aussie Macromedia Developers: http://lists.daemon.com.au/
