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  • jay23
    Confirmed User
    • Jun 2003
    • 1444

    #61
    Originally posted by Snake Doctor
    This is something I've thought about as well, although I'm not well versed in the specifics. With level3 laying down 10gbps lines, they basically decupled their network capacity for a very small capital outlay (relatively speaking), so it was inevitable that prices were going to drop significantly.

    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

    Comment

    • jay23
      Confirmed User
      • Jun 2003
      • 1444

      #62
      Originally posted by Cyandin
      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.
      how much is over charge if I go over 100 meg (I see that the port speed is 1g)

      Comment

      • Cyandin
        Confirmed User
        • Aug 2008
        • 1723

        #63
        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


        Originally posted by SpeakEasy
        As Brad Mitchel said in another thread, if you need 4-6 dollar bandwidth to make a few bucks then you're fucked anyway and might as well go to McDonalds now.
        I feel compelled to point out the inaccuracy [imho] of this [alleged] claim. Brad, I respect both your tenure in the industry, as it is greater than mine, and Mojo's excellent reputation. However, I disagree with this [alleged] statement on the grounds that I believe it is more of an appeal to your favored price point for a sale, than the actual truth. I don't think that needing $4-6 bandwidth is a sign of being in dire straits at all. Different sites monetize at different rates, and some cut it pretty slim. When you're pushing tens of gigabits, and bandwidth cost comprises >%90 of your total operational expense, lowering that bandwidth cost is directly proportional to money-in-pocket.

        Originally posted by DrinkingHARDEST
        Choopa/Webair/Mojohost are all great hosts!
        Thank you, DH. You rock!

        Originally posted by Spudstr
        Given the correct box and software i.e single quad with 4-8gb ram or dual quad with 4x 15k sas drives you can easily do 700Mbps out of a single machine.
        I agree %100.

        Originally posted by Alex Xe
        Contact to me, icq 122336844, special tube solutions from 100 mbits.
        You can push 1800-1900 mbits per server, special setup.
        Here too. I've personally setup port-channeled servers that pushed 2gbps.

        Originally posted by WiredGuy
        I'm also looking for the same kind of thing, 100 megabit plans for sub $6/megabit rates. I have one new host I'm signing with today and could use more.
        WG
        Feel free to ICQ me to see how my offering compares, too.

        Comment

        • Phil21
          Confirmed User
          • May 2001
          • 993

          #64
          Originally posted by danayster
          I've always considered myself someone who's always got along with numbers and math, but for some reason I cannot fully comprehend what "95th percentile" actually calculates too. I've even looked it up at Wikipedia but its just still unclear.

          Can someone please explain the terminology to me? In the context of how web hosts use it.
          95th percentile is basically how your providers are billed, almost exclusively. The other option for providers is if course a full link (e.g. 10 gigabit) for X. Most providers usually will opt for the 95th percentile as it lets you cheaply have additional capacity, without paying for it sitting there unused. For example, I could have 2x10GE uplinks to level3, each pushing 5gbit and pay for the actual usage of 10Gbit/sec vs. having to have 2 10gbit links, one maxed out, and the other essentially unused while paying for the full 20gbit.

          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
          Quality affordable hosting.

          Comment

          • Cyandin
            Confirmed User
            • Aug 2008
            • 1723

            #65
            Originally posted by jay23
            how much is over charge if I go over 100 meg (I see that the port speed is 1g)
            $8/mbps

            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.

            Comment

            • Cyandin
              Confirmed User
              • Aug 2008
              • 1723

              #66
              Phil, my hats off to you. My fingers hurt just thinking about typing all that. :P

              Comment

              • WiredGuy
                Pounding Googlebot
                • Aug 2002
                • 34512

                #67
                Originally posted by Cyandin
                Feel free to ICQ me to see how my offering compares, too.
                I emailed Andy over the weekend and got a pricing quote at around $14/megabit, definitely not as competitive as I had hoped.
                WG
                I play with Google.

                Comment

                • ISPrime_dimi
                  Confirmed User
                  • Jul 2008
                  • 228

                  #68
                  Sean, please contact us on ICQ or via email. I'm sure we can work something out in your favor.

                  Contact me for great deals on managed hosting & CDN!
                  Skype: [email protected]
                  Email: [email protected]

                  Comment

                  • danayster
                    Confirmed User
                    • Dec 2007
                    • 152

                    #69
                    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.
                    60k UV a day Trade Traffic
                    contact: captainnaughty(at)naughtytube .net
                    icq: 498 - 792 - 933

                    Comment

                    • jay23
                      Confirmed User
                      • Jun 2003
                      • 1444

                      #70
                      Originally posted by WiredGuy
                      I emailed Andy over the weekend and got a pricing quote at around $14/megabit, definitely not as competitive as I had hoped.
                      WG
                      Phil seems to offer a good price ($6/meg).

                      Comment

                      • zentz
                        Confirmed User
                        • Nov 2003
                        • 8062

                        #71
                        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.
                        Last edited by zentz; 10-07-2008, 07:16 AM.
                        Programs that owe me money ---- Epassporte.com ~ $2700 | Protraffic.com ~ $2600 | XonDemand.com ~ $3000

                        Email: [email protected]

                        Comment

                        • Cyandin
                          Confirmed User
                          • Aug 2008
                          • 1723

                          #72
                          Originally posted by WiredGuy
                          I emailed Andy over the weekend and got a pricing quote at around $14/megabit, definitely not as competitive as I had hoped.
                          WG
                          WG,

                          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.

                          Comment

                          • Spyce
                            Confirmed User
                            • Dec 2002
                            • 335

                            #73
                            I suggest Choopa - they have excellent 24/7 service and their billing is a dream!
                            Spyce



                            Our content feeds, your design - now starting at only $0.49 per gb - NO MINIMUMS!

                            Comment

                            • dready
                              Confirmed User
                              • Oct 2002
                              • 5247

                              #74
                              If you want very cheap but non-managed, check out LeaseWeb.
                              ICQ: 91139591

                              Comment

                              • Kudles
                                Confirmed User
                                • Feb 2003
                                • 5477

                                #75
                                Good luck with that
                                Free to Play MMOs and MMORPGs

                                Comment

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