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Category: Life: Work and Techy

Techy: Should I move from a dedicated server to co-location?

I recently assisted somebody in deciding whether to move from a dedicated server to a co-location provider (a “co-lo” is where you purchase the hardware, install it etc etc: the “co-lo” provider provides the physical space in a secure environment, links to the internet, power, cooling etc) and I thought my thoughts on the matter may help anybody else who is thinking of moving from a dedicated server at at a Datacenter to a co-location company:

Don’t forget that a dedicated server company isn’t just offering you the hardware, the software, the IP addresses, the multiple provider bandwidth (some co-lo’s will only provide one provider), and as much electricity and cooling is needed: they also provide you with “humans”.

Ok, you can automate remote reboots (as most major dedicated server providers now offer), KVM over IP (as a few dedicated server providers and datacenters offer) to provide most remote administration: but what happens if your hard drive fails, PSU or even mother board fails?

Most dedicated server providers guarantee replacement within 4 hours – how long will it take you to purchase a new HD/PSU/motherboard/SCSI controller etc (dedicated server provider hardware replacements are free: with co-locaiton you’ll have to account for the replacement costs), drive to the datacenter, get access to your cage/rack (some require 24 hours notice for security), open the server up, replace the parts and then get things running again…

I know some co-lo providers provide “on site hands and eyes” and “free hardware replacement” (IF you use the hardware they specify), but then the costs start equally or going over the dedicated server cost AND you may not have the network the dedicated server provider provide.

Of course, if you’re within 10 minutes drive of a major datacenter (such as Telehouse or Redbus) AND you have backup staff within the same drive-distance (for when you are unavailable) AND you have a couple of hundred servers you can afford to buy “outright” straight off with spares (and maybe account for a couple of “hot-spares” for critical servers) AND are willing to commit to an 12-24 month contract with the datacenter then it may be worth considering…

Net: Paypal Fee Calculator

Do you trade on Paypal at all? If so, you may find taking into account the transaction fees Paypal charge into your product price difficult. Not to fear though – I’ve come across a Paypal Fee Calculator site which will do it all for you. It’ll calculate the different fees in affect in the different countries Paypal operates – and even which level of “Merchant” you are in Paypal: and it’ll tell you how much you need to charge (or will receive) to take into account the fees.

It doesn’t do currency conversions yet, but it’s a good system to use (if you don’t mind all the complaints about Paypal.

Techy: The Season To Do Tech Support

From my current webhost’s blog – an article about it “being the season to do tech support and how we techies do seem to spend our “downtime” (such as weekends, Christmas, Easter etc) fixing other peoples computers.

I can guarantee that any weekend I go around to see my parents, I’ll spend an hour “optimising” my Dad’s PC (antivirus checks, Windows updates, spyware removal etc etc) – and the only reason I don’t think I’ll be doing the same this Christmas is as I’ll only be doing a “flying visit” for around an hour before I go off to my Partner’s parents.

Techy: ISP Maps

I was quite impressed the other day to come across two maps showing the various internet service providers and where their transit comes from for New Zealand and South Africa – but I’m quite disappointed to see there wasn’t a similar map for the United Kingdom. Boo!

Can some kind soul please put together a map for the UK ISPs as I think it’ll be quite interesting? I would do it myself, but time factors are stopping me 🙁