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wow great thread
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Re: the Brad comment.
He's actually more right than you realize. He is talking about something that goes a bit deeper than what appears on the surface, and those in the business know precisely what he is getting at. Will $6/meg (or less) flat-rate pricing become viable in the future? My take is probably. For this to happen, bandwidth use must increase to offset the per-unit cost decrease. My crystal ball is malfunctioning today, but I do not currently see a stop to the slow decline of bandwidth prices. I do believe there is a floor on the wholesale rates, but I'm not going to peg it at a number. As long as revenues can continue to increase overall (if I can go to Level3 and say "hey, we're paying $100,000 for 10,000mbit right now.. we'd like to increase our spend with you to $200,000 for 40,000mbit" that's in general viewed as a win) you will continue to see the slow downward trend in bandwidth pricing, just as you have over the last 10 years. At some point though, usage is going to start to flatten out, and you will then see a stop to wholesale IP price erosion as there will be no more "winning additional revenue" on the table. I think we're "close" to that floor, but hey - I've been proved wrong before! Basically, someone coming to me asking to pay $6/mbit @ 95% and 15 servers simply does not interest me. Some hosts may take that business, but it would not be profitable for me to do so. Carefully selected specials can certainly get the per-mbit rate down for select customers, and those customers should absolutely take advantage of that fact. I've probably talked to 25 or so folks since Friday night, and I've actually only offered competitive quotes to perhaps 4 of them. The rest, we simply were not willing to compete on pricing they were seeing from other providers. For us, the specials listed are carefully crafted promotional specials. They cultivate good word of mouth, as I'd put our support up against anyone out there. Once someone is in the door with us, we generally have them as a client for over 3.5 years (with a few exceptions, where I fully admit we have dropped the ball). Getting people in the door is hard - the sheer number of hosts posting just on GFY should give everyone an idea of that fact. We also, could not survive on *actually* selling $4/mbit like Brad is getting at. For some this is a great deal, for others we won't line up well with their goals. Brad is a marketing genius in my book, I wish I had 1/10th of his PR and sales skills. While he may be a bit blunt in his comments, and perhaps to an outsider not completely explain what he's really getting at, he is absolutely correct. As I've said many times to many potential clients - folks like him, and a few other hosts here, I absolutely do not mind competing against since I know I'm going up against honest bids. It's the hosts Brad is getting at that are a cancer on this industry offering things they simply cannot sustain. To put blunt words on it - many hosts out there are lying to you about what they provide. So, in my limited opinion - jump on the specials you are seeing offered soon. Brad isn't completely off his rocker :) Back to football for me! Go Vikes! |
One of the things we are missing is the improvments in optics and DWDM technology which allows you to push more and more BW on a single strand of fiber. The capx cost of pushing 40gb is same as what it cost 10gb 3 years ago and in 3 years we will see 160gb on the same cost. http://www.lightreading.com/ has soem very good reading on this topic.
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That's still not bad really, even at that it's $8 per meg with 99 more to go without spending anymore....I just want to make sure I understood you correctly. This is the first special like this I've seen where a gige connection is available, which means you could use the whole 100mbps. With a 100mbps capped line you can really only use about 70 before performance becomes an issue (based on personal experience)....so pricing on specials like these is, as you've said before, something of a marketing gimmick, it's not usually really $4 per mbit. Quote:
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Can someone please explain the terminology to me? In the context of how web hosts use it. |
Hey everyone,
Sorry, if I hadn't had such a busy day, I would have posted in this thread earlier. Since the ever popular 100mbps server is what all the other companies are offering up, I'll put mine in the mix, for consideration. Quadcore Xeon e5405 (2.0ghz / 12mb cache / 1333mhz fsb) 8GB DDR2 FB-DIMM (667mhz) 2x500GB 7200rpm SATA II hdd's (Raid-1) 1000mbps NIC 100mbps Dedicated Bandwidth (capped or uncapped) Transit providers: Nlayer, DTAG, Level3 (NO Cogent garbage) Full Management, which includes: OS installation (custom kernel modules OK, CentOS w/PAE module is standard), software installation (again, custom apache/lighttpd modules OK), as well as server optimization and hardening $699.00/month Feel free to hit me up on ICQ or email at any time, and I will respond promptly. That is, unless you've caught me during one my few hours of daily sleep we keyboard commandos get these days. I hope you all are well, and I can help you with your next server ASAP. :thumbsup |
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The cost of putting fiber is fixed and now days paid thanks to all the chapter 11 we had after the dot com crash. So every time say L3 want add more usage all they have to do is lit more fiber or replace the optics (start location, end location and every 40km or 160km telco huts) and they go from 10gb to 40gb to 160gb, you get the idea. Jay |
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Since this thread is of great interest to me (and is a great thread in and of itself...a lot of good input from some very knowledgeable people, esp. k0nr4d), here is my $.02
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This also works for you as well, it's how a provider can provider you a gige or 100mbit line, and bill you for a fraction of it. Your host having the extra capacity for you to use above your committed data rate, does not come free in terms of internal infrastructure and transit/peering links to other providers. Thus, average billing (otherwise known as per-GB billing, the math is identical) incurs substantial risk for a host - what happens when a user maxes out their gige for a single hour during each day, but has zero usage otherwise? Via average billing they would be billed for nearly nothing, but you still had to have a full gigabit of capacity for them - obviously taking a rather substantial loss. Again, a numbers game :) That explains *why* 95th percentile is used. Hopefully I can explain the math behind it concisely. My favorite way to try to describe it's intent to folks, is it is "average peak utilization" of a given link. The number was found to largely capture the actual rate used on a day to day basis, during a given customer's peak times - while allowing for extraneous bursting to not be billed (so if you hit a full gigabit for 4 hours one day, and you otherwise are at around 200mbit during your daily peaks, you will be billed for that 200mbit, not the full gige). The math works like so. Imagine you have 30 days in a month. 10% of this figure is 3 days, so we have some nice round numbers to work with. Lets say I take an average usage rate for each day. So, I have 30 "samples" of your average daily usage. I then look at this data, and throw out the 3 highest days of usage. The next highest sample (day) is what determines your billing rate. This lets you have 3 days of "free" bursting, and you pay for the next highest daily average after those 3. 95th percentile for billing works exactly the same way. Simply swap out the 30 samples (days) with 3600 samples (5 minute averages), and the top 10% of those with 5%. In a provider billing case, we are throwing away the top 5% of those 5 minute averages, and then billing you on the next highest 5 minute average usage sample. This equates to roughly 1.5 days of "free" usage. So, if you get slashdotted one day out of the month, you will not be billed for your quadruple usage. If you get slashdotted for 5 days of the month, you will. It sounds somewhat complicated at first, but once you become familiar with it, it's not so bad. In fact, it's pretty amazing how accurate it really is at getting to the "average daily peak usage" number I mentioned at first. Hope that helps :) SnakeDoctor - yep, you understand it fully. Let me know if you have further questions. Peace, -Phil |
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If this is a worry, we have no problem implementing a cap, at any level. For example, if you want to commit to 100mbps, want to be able to realize growth, but don't want to be liable for a 600bmps 12-hour spike, we could just commit you to 100mps, and cap you at 150mbps. Just some food for thought. :2 cents: |
Phil, my hats off to you. My fingers hurt just thinking about typing all that. :P
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WG |
Sean, please contact us on ICQ or via email. I'm sure we can work something out in your favor.
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thanks for the explanation Phil. I think I'm a bit closer to understanding 95th Percentile now. Your right it will be a case of actually getting the bill and working with it more to feel at home with it.
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i have unmanaged single xeon quad core 4gb ram, 2x500gb sata 7200rpm and 100mbps unmetered at $500 per month server. if you can get me managed server for the same or better price, please contact me on icq.
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I'm certain there was a misunderstanding at some point. Contact Andy again, or myself with your needs, and we'll develop a solution in the $6-7 range, most likely. |
I suggest Choopa - they have excellent 24/7 service and their billing is a dream!
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If you want very cheap but non-managed, check out LeaseWeb.
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Good luck with that
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>> 3x >> Dual Quad Core >> 4 GB RAM >> 2x 120 GB SATA >> Raid 1 >> >> 100 Mbps Dedicated, Tier 1 BW >> $1399/ Mo Unless I misunderstood that to be 3 * 100 megabit packages, but from the looks of it, it's 100 megabit total. WG |
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WG |
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This is THREE SERVERS, with an aggregate bandwidth commitment of 100mbps. :) |
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Wow! im still paying $825 for one of my managed servers with 50mbps, and that's Cogent. what's the etiquette for contacting my host and telling them if they cant lower my monthy hosting cost, I will move? lol |
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"hey, I signed up X years ago for Y price. Since then it looks like the market changed quite a bit, I can get offers A B and C from these competing comparable hosts. I'd love to stick with you guys since you've provided excellent service, but since you are 40% higher priced I do need to consider by bottom line. Is there any way you can match this pricing I'm getting offered elsewhere?" Your host should actually very much appreciate such an e-mail. It always sucks to lose a customer over something like a 20% price difference. I do appreciate it when I get a chance to save a long-term relationship. I'd say about 50% of the time, I can straight up match or beat the price asked for, the other 25% of the time I can make a counter-offer that is accepted. The remaining 25% we do lose and the customer ends up leaving - but usually to a non-comparable host. We also (and a lot of other good hosts here) try to be somewhat proactive about contacting customers and offering price discounts when appropriate. This is a bit harder (for me, at least) than it sounds due to the ridiculous number of customized plans have - it does take some considerable time. -Phil |
webair works like a charm
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Phil, you have an e-mail I can contact you at? I would like to get a quote from you.
if my current host will not match it I will move over to you. |
That choopa offer is very nice...
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If you can't lower my monthly hosting cost, I will move. Respectfully; (<----this is the etiquette part) Customer |
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[email protected] should work Thanks! -Phil |
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WG |
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Bit of shameless promotion, but I feel this thread has a lot of pertinent information for some folks currently looking around for options.
Rather than have everyone repeat everything, may as well put it at the top. Lots of good options from various folks in here. Bump :) |
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Great service so far :thumbsup |
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Can you either hit me up on email, suspect79 AT Gmail dot com or send me a PM if possible? Would like to ask you some things bout the Rayzz script. Tried looking for contact details for Danayster, but I couldn't find it, so if someone else sees this and knows him please ask him to hit me up. Thanks! |
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