I think dyndns gives you 50 hosts for something like 30 -40 dollars a year,

I call that a business expense and move on, I use my account for all my
clients

Only downside is that if you are using their host updater program on a pc to
update DNS with ip changes, you see all of the hosts registered to that
account, which you generally don't want clients seeing other clients info.

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of J- P
Sent: Sunday, June 29, 2014 9:23 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [NTSysADM] OT: DDNS Providers

 

Do you normally use your own account for all your clients domains  or ask
them  to register  on their own?

I like the idea of not having to deal with billing them individually for
their accounts, HOWEVER, not fond of remembering/recording each clients
account credentials to manage the DNS.


  
Jean-Paul Natola
 



  _____  

From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [NTSysADM] OT: DDNS Providers
Date: Sun, 29 Jun 2014 20:59:36 +0000

If you have a Synology NAS device, you can also use the Synology DDNS
service as a complementary service.  I recently switch to this from DynDNS
and have been happy with it.

 

-Aakash Shah

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Andrew S. Baker
Sent: Sunday, June 29, 2014 11:35 AM
To: ntsysadm
Subject: Re: [NTSysADM] OT: DDNS Providers

 

I use DNS Made Easy and DynDNS.




 

 


ASB
 <http://xeeme.com/AndrewBaker> http://XeeMe.com/AndrewBaker
Providing Virtual CIO Services (IT Operations & Information Security) for
the SMB market.

 

 

On Sun, Jun 29, 2014 at 1:15 PM, J- P <[email protected]> wrote:

Hi all,

 

Anyone have a preference or opinion on DDNS providers? As i'm increasing my
consulting work and working with more SMB's , i'm amazed at the outrageous
prices some ISP's are asking for a static IP's.

 

 

The main use for the DDNS is  RDWeb /RDP/2X  , and in some cases email.

 

 

 

Thanks

JP

 

 

 


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