I don’t know how helpful this is, but … the best time to buy hosting is Black 
Friday.

For points (1) and (3), this might help. 

First, if I’m understanding (3) correctly, I think you want to be looking at a 
“Reseller” type of account. By itself, cPanel is for  ONE account/domain. They 
have a thing called a “Reseller” panel, WHM (Web Hosting Manager), that lets 
you set up some number of independent cPanel accounts. Ignore the name, it’s 
just a way to manage multiple cPanel accounts if you need them. If you want to 
build and manage multiple sites for yourself and/or clients, this is the way to 
go.

If you want to actually BE a hosting “reseller”, then you’ll also need WHMCS or 
something like that to handle your billing. Some places include it with WHM, 
most offer it as an option. If you don’t need billing, save your money and 
don’t get it. 

Sometimes some places offer big discounts, but the only thing consistent with 
most of them is they offer SOME discount BUT … it only applies to your FIRST 
INVOICE. Meaning that if you have a monthly plan, it only applies to the first 
month’s bill. But if you get a 3-year plan, it’s for the whole 3-year term.

On Black Friday, they’ll usually offer a plan upgrade for free PLUS the 
discount. So you’d get a 30-50 site reseller plan for the price of a 15-25 site 
plan. Or on a single account, they’d offer the next step up, like Silver 
instead of Bronze for the Bronze price.

I personally prefer cPanel and WHM, mostly b/c I’ve been using them for a very 
long time and am used to how they work.

However, there are tweaks that hosting providers can make that are often done 
to reduce their support overhead rather than help customers get our jobs done 
better. One case i point is NameCheap — I love them for domain registrations, 
but their hosting SUCKS! They have so many weird restrictions compared to other 
cPanel/WHM providers that it’s silly. When I’d ask, their canned reply was “for 
security reasons”. I’m sorry, but disabling the ability to click on the little 
cPanel icon in a row in WHM to open cPanel for that account does not strike me 
as security related. Doing so is quick and easy, but it restricts what you can 
do to a certain extent on the target account, because you’re not logged-in as 
the account holder — and I suspect your average user doesn’t understand that. 
As a result, it probably increaes their support tickets, so they disabled it. 
Several cPanel features are limited or blocked as well for the same excuse. 
I’ve never encountered this anywhere else. 

I was at one place for a while, Eleven2, and they were pretty good, but on Sept 
2nd of last year, they suddenly switched-out cPanel/WHM for a totally different 
control panel! It was totally unannounced, with no advance warning, no way to 
go back, and I had problems for over a month. I paid for one year of cPanel/WHM 
hosting, and they just took it away and replaced it with something else. No 
apologies, no discussion, no warnings. Just “poof” and here ya go.

Come Black Friday, I found a great deal on hosting from WebHostingWorld.net 
<http://webhostingworld.net/> and paid for a year of SSD-based Reseller 
(cPanel/WHM) access with 50 sites for a 50% discount — it worked out to about 
$12/mo. Screaming deal.

Most cPanel/WHM hosts have raised their prices to reflect what cPanel has done. 
So a 15-user WHM account works out to $20/mo or so.

The nice thing about cPanel is that if you want to change hosts, the new ones 
can move your old account over in about 30 seconds — it’s built into the Admin 
side of the platform. The only shortcoming is that it messes up whatever 
Packages you have defined. Most of the support folks don’t even really know 
what this means, but you’ll find out the first time you try adding another 
account in WHM and the only Package options you have are the defaults that WHM 
offers — yours got lost in the move, but they still show up on the old accounts.

I was with HostGator for quite a while, but after they got bought by the “Borg” 
company buying up so many other hosting providers, their support went to crap. 
Many others as well. Stay away from the whole bunch of them.

As for (2), most will NOT give you SSH access. PERIOD. I did ask my current 
guys and they said they’d hook me up with a restricted shell on a per-account 
basis.

That said, you really only need it if you’re going to install some kind of 
script that requires you go do it from a command shell.

cPanel has a File Manager in it that lets you do pretty much anything you can 
do in a Windows Explorer or Mac Finder window, including editing .access files.

I also have a Windows VPN hosted at VirMach. They’re ok, and I got a great 
price — I think it was a New Year’s sale.

A lot of hosting places are totally automating their support, which is a PITA 
if you run into any real problems. They love to tout their Support, but they’re 
ALL cutting back. If you want REAL support, you’ll want to get a “Managed 
Hosting” account.

I can set you up with a managed Wordpress account and tons of premium plugins 
for $50/mo. I don’t have a sales page for it yet, tho. (It’s through WPMUDev.)

-David Schwartz




> On Apr 3, 2023, at 1:48 PM, Keith Smith via PLUG-discuss 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> I am looking at cheap shared hosting providers.
> 
> I found two so far... Bluehost and HostGator.
> 
> I used Hostgator in the past and it was good and then really bad, and it has 
> been a while.  I eventually moved on.  I have not used Bluehost and the 
> reviews are mixed.
> 
> I have three requirements:
> 
> 1) must have a control panel.
> 2) must have ssh access. Not sure this is really necessary because, off the 
> top of my head, all I need is to be able to edit the .htaccess file which I 
> can do local and FTP up... or the control panel might have a built in editor. 
>  I probably need access to SSH so I can set file permissions.
> 3) must be highly discounted when buying in bulk.
> 
> Any other cheap hosting providers you would recommend?
> 
> Your thoughts?
> 
> Thanks!!
> 
> Keith
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