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Should You Use Shared or reseller Hosting?
There are lots of internet marketers both new and experienced out there wondering whether to use shared or reseller web hosting. Many do not even understand the differences between the two. Both reseller hosting and shared hosting are very common amongst internet marketers in the world today. Although some do make use of dedicated hosting, this should only be considered when your presence online has grown to such an extent that your current hosting can't handle it any more.
For the most part though, shared and reseller hosting are the most popular choices for the majority of online marketers. Both plans come with their own different options, suitable for most small to medium online presences. One question remains though; which is the perfect one for your particular situation?
For those just beginning in the online world, having maybe just a couple of sites with only a small amount of traffic, shared hosting is enough. The reason being that reseller hosting starts at $25 a month, but shared can be as low as $4 a month; don't need to be clever to work out which one is the better for beginners.
It would make more sense choosing a reseller hosting plan if you have many websites, or if you are thinking about adding more in the future. Ususally, the reseller hosting plans allow you to utilise 250GB of bandwidth, while using 25GB of disk space for your files. Just so you can compare these numbers, a normal website would use around 2Gb of bandwidth each month, while using only about 75MB of disk space.
From this you can see that reseller hosting allows you to have many sites hosted. This would make much more sense for an internet marketer rather than having the shared hosting plan. Looking at the example above then, you can see that reseller and shared hosting issues needn't be confusing.
If you have a site then you need to choose the best web hosting, whether this is zen cart web hosting or vbulletin web hosting you must make sure that you choose a cracking and reliable site.
What's the best method to transferring my Microworm culture to a new container?
I have them in a small 2-pint sized cube tupperware, plenty of medium, but I've read that since it smells bad, I should put them in a new one. What's the best way to do that?
I just take a clean toothpick or other similar object and scrape a bit off the sides. Try not to get any of the old medium.
I transfer mine to a new cup of oatmeal/yeast every three days or so. the more worms you start with the faster it will colonize and the less likely it is to be overtaken by bacteria.
Nicolas Jaar Unveils His Rad Music Cube Thing... (The Daily Swarm)
_Wunderkind!_ From Dummy:
> CSA work a lot with live performance but their first physical production is
the Prism, a palm-sized cube preloaded with twelve tracks from Jaar himself
and other CSA collaborators. The thought behind the prism is a combination of
medium and message and a prompt to reconsider the relationship between
listener and music [and look nice on a desk – Ed].
Read and comment. From dummymag.com.
NANODOTS - TUTORIAL #44 (Intermediate) Medium Sized Cube 264 Dots
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