You are getting a T-1 from AT&T for $50 a month? Maybe I need to talk to
them.

Ciao,
Graywolf
http://pages.prodigy.net/graywolfphoto
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----- Original Message -----
From: Timothy Sherburne <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: Pentax Discussion List <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Friday, March 15, 2002 1:16 PM
Subject: Re: OT: Web Site Domains


> Hi Shel...
>
> A little background: My day/night job is project manager for an
educational
> company's web-based product. This means I write code, design pages and
plan
> deployment for what is essentially a really fancy website with
subscription
> access. See comments below.
>
> On 3/14/02 9:35 PM, Shel Belinkoff wrote:
>
> > I want to set up my own domain.  There are numerous places where one can
> > register a domain name, and, of course, some are less expensive than
> > others.  Some offer mail forwarding and linking to my current site.
> > Others just register the chosen name.  My ISP will register a domain,
> > increase the size of my site, add a few perks, and charge me a lot more
> > than it seems other places charge.
>
> Like many things in life, it all comes down to what you want to do
yourself
> balanced against what you're willing to pay for.
>
> First off, your ISP does NOT have to be your website host. Shop around,
find
> someone that you can work with and has the patience to answer your
> questions. I'd recommend staying away from the Big Boys in the hosting
> business. They will charge you plenty and the service tends to be awful.
See
> if you can find a local hosting service that's run by folks you can take
out
> for a beer and a chat. Get a copy of your local geek magazine (they're
> usually free at technical bookstores) and look at the ads - there will be
> dozens of web hosting companies wanting your business.
>
> For about $60/year (not including an internet connection), you can host
your
> own site, including email, web, chat, et cetera, but you will need to do
> EVERYTHING on your own: maintain routers, firewalls, operating systems,
> server apps, hardware, the list is endless. You can do all of it for free
if
> you're motivated, industrious and resourceful. Linux forms the foundation
of
> this approach, and, of course, you must become a proficient juggler.
>
> That $60 comes from registering your domain name with Network Solutions
($30
> fee, www.netsol.com) and starting a Dynamic DNS account ($30 donation,
> www.dyndns.org).
>
> Your site host can take on some or all of this for you, depending on how
> much money you are willing to spend.
>
> > How hard is it to move a web site?
>
> No more difficult than a simple file copy if your website is basic HTML.
> Things get hairier if you've got server-side scripting or executables to
> move.
>
> > What do you suggest as a good way to get a domain name - register and
> > set up a site with the same provider? With links? Or what?
>
> Shop around. I registered my personal domain name (for family stuff) with
> Network Solutions (www.netsol.com). I personally think they're a bunch of
> money grubbing jerks, but they had best price for what I needed at the
time.
> AT&T provides my 1.5MB pipe for $50/month, and I do everything else
myself.
> All of my servers are old Macs running various bits of shareware and
> freeware. This solution isn't robust enough to handle thousands of hits
per
> hour, but it works fine for sharing pix and stories with friends and
family.
> -
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