Horrible_one

Monday, June 18, 2007

Benefits

Provides you with a customized, easy-to-remember e-mail address that you can give to customers, friends, and family.Because we use a 'catch all' e-mail forwarding system, you effectively have an unlimited number of e-mail address. Any name you put before the '@' symbol of your new domain name will be automatically forwarded to the e-mail address you've specified.Separates your e-mail identity from your e-mail provider. If you change providers, you won't have to send out notices to people you correspond with, because you'll still be able to be reached at your custom domain name. Provides you with a customized, easy-to-remember e-mail address that you can give to customers, friends, and family.Because we use a 'catch all' e-mail forwarding system, you effectively have an unlimited number of e-mail address. Any name you put before the '@' symbol of your new domain name will be automatically forwarded to the e-mail address you've specified.Separates your e-mail identity from your e-mail provider. If you change providers, you won't have to send out notices to people you correspond with, because you'll still be able to be reached at your custom domain name.

Sunday, June 10, 2007

June 2007 Web Server Survey


from the May survey. This month we have expanded our graph of server software publishers to include Google, primarily due to Blogger's move from Apache to GFE.
The change at Blogger which commenced last month is primarily responsible for the further decline of 2.2% in Apache's headline market share, and most of the larger 7.4% decline in active sites. Although not a server product like Apache or Microsoft-IIS, Google's services are an increasingly popular alternative platform for running a blog or simple web site (googlepages.com), or content that would have formly been hosted on a desktop or networked filesystem (e.g. spreadsheets.google.com).
Google debuts with a 3.99% share of the server market in hostnames, and a 6.59% share in active sites. Most of those sites were previously running on Apache.
This month's data also yields some of the strongest evidence yet of the power shift in web hosting, with search portals and domain registrars experiencing enormous growth while paid hosting specialists lag behind. Microsoft (+532K) and Google (+521K) each gain more than half a million sites, while Go Daddy (+455K) and Demand Media (+245K) continue to amass huge numbers of users on their hosting platforms. This trend, along with the growth of social networks and image/video hosting services, is prompting deals in the hosting industry as providers seek the scale and breadth of services to compete.