Look like they against Egalitarianism

 

>> creators of the Db language have decided to create three different kinds
of classes: lower, middle, and upper classes.

 

Which class are you?

 

You wouldn't be lower class as these have no property and methods. I am sure
that you own some property and have some madness in your methods.

 

Thanks for making me aware of this anyway. It was worth a chuckle. Pretty
old at April 1, 2006 though.

 

Regards Peter Maddin
Applications Development Officer
PathWest Laboratory Medicine WA
Phone : +618 6396 4285 (Monday, Wednesday,Friday)

Phone : +618 9346 4372 (Tuesday, Thursday)
Mobile: 0423 540 825 
E-Mail : [email protected]; [email protected]
The contents of this e-mail transmission outside of the WAGHS network are
intended solely for the named recipient's), may be confidential, and may be
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immediately.

 From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Stephen Price
Sent: Tuesday, 3 April 2012 12:26 PM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: The cost of putting small websites online

 

Damn it. Now I can't use cost as an excuse for not getting off my arse and
learning more about Azure. Ok, I've put it on my list of things to learn,
right after Db.

 

http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/13639/Db-The-Future-Is-Coming 

http://thenextlanguage.net/ 

 

I'm really excited about the possibilities of Db, especially the tooling.

On Tue, Apr 3, 2012 at 12:15 PM, Andrew Coates (DPE AUSTRALIA)
<[email protected]> wrote:

Special offer for MSDN Subscribers:

If you are an existing Visual Studio Professional, Premium or Ultimate with
MSDN subscriber, you get free access to Windows Azure each month, and up to
$3,700.00 in annual Windows Azure benefits at no charge.

This offer provides a base level of Compute, Storage, Content Delivery
Network, SQL Azure database, Access Control, Service Bus and Caching each
month at no charge. Customers can use these Windows Azure subscriptions for
commercial use.

 

>From http://www.windowsazure.com/en-us/pricing/member-offers/msdn-benefits/ 

 

Andrew Coates, ME, MCPD, MCSD MCTS, Developer Evangelist, Microsoft, 1
Epping Road, NORTH RYDE NSW 2113


Ph: +61 (2) 9870 2719 <tel:%2B61%20%282%29%209870%202719>  . Mob +61 (416)
134 993 <tel:%2B61%20%28416%29%20134%20993>  . Fax: +61 (2) 9870 2400
<tel:%2B61%20%282%29%209870%202400>  . http://blogs.msdn.com/acoat

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of David Burela
Sent: Monday, 2 April 2012 5:43 PM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: The cost of putting small websites online

 

"The T&C on the MSDN credits for Azure, don't they state that you can't put
production sites on it, only development sites?"

 

Looking around, I can't find any specific details on if you can use the MSDN
credits for production use.

https://www.windowsazure.com/en-us/pricing/member-offers/msdn-benefits/ 

On 2 April 2012 17:31, David Burela <[email protected]> wrote:

The T&C on the MSDN credits for Azure, don't they state that you can't put
production sites on it, only development sites?

 

-David Burela

 

On 2 April 2012 16:58, Andrew Coates (DPE AUSTRALIA)
<[email protected]> wrote:

<plug>

If you're an MSDN subscriber, then you get Azure usage as part of that
subscription.

 

You can host multiple web sites on a singe Azure instance. In fact, what you
might want to do is have 2 extra small instances running multiple web sites
so you've got the umpteen 9's SLA.

</plug>

Cheers

 

Coatsy

 

Andrew Coates, MCSD MCTS, Developer Evangelist, Microsoft, 1 Epping Road,
NORTH RYDE NSW 2113
Ph: +61 (2) 9870 2719 <tel:%2B61%20%282%29%209870%202719>  . Mob +61 (416)
134 993 <tel:%2B61%20%28416%29%20134%20993>  . Fax: +61 (2) 9870 2400
<tel:%2B61%20%282%29%209870%202400>  .  <http://blogs.msdn.com/acoat/>
http://blogs.msdn.com/acoat/

  _____  

From: [email protected] [[email protected]] on
behalf of David Burela [[email protected]]
Sent: Monday, 2 April 2012 15:41


To: ozDotNet
Subject: The cost of putting small websites online

 

Over the weekend I was considering "supporting websites". Websites that
support the promotion of your small applications (such as phone apps). 

 

Lets say I'm making phone applications, and I just want to throw a website
up to act as a landing page. Something I can direct new users to which
displays an About page, have an embedded video, etc.

I tried doing some calculations for how much something like this would cost,
this is what I came up with

 

AppHarbor / DNSimple ( <https://dnsimple.com/pricing>
https://dnsimple.com/pricing &  <https://appharbor.com/pricing>
https://appharbor.com/pricing)

Domain registration - $16 / year

DNS mapping - $34 / year

Website hosting - $0

Website hosting with DNS mapping - $120 / year

Total $170 / year / application.

 

Wordpress.com

Domain registration - $5 / year (wordpress upgrade)

Domain mapping - $12 / year (wordpress upgrade)

Removal of adverts - $36 / year

Custom design - $30

Total $83 / year / application

 

Both options are probably more than I'll make on most of my small apps. And
gets expensive when promoting multiple apps.

I could try and get more bang for my buck and extend the site so that it can
also host some supporting webservices that my application can use.

 

 

Are my calculations correct? 

Is there another way to go about this?

How do you guys go about creating small landing pages like this?
("Buying your own server" seems a very heavy handed way to go about it, and
I don't want to become a full time sys-admin looking after my own server)

 

-David Burela

 

 

 

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