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Cloud Computing Or Dedicated Hosting

By Monique Sanford


What will be best to use with your next project? Do you jump on the cloud bandwagon or play it on the safe side and go with a dedicated server? Much of it comes down to what your anticipated usage will be and what the application is.

A lot of people can not wait to join the cloud computing club, but just take it easy. For you it may not be the best thing even if it is the latest and greatest thing. If we look at the pricing of cloud computing, it is very cheap. The trap here is you are doing an apples to apples comparison. This is because you are only paying for the resources needed for the virtualized instance. With a dedicated server you pay a flat rate regardless of how much of it you use. Do not fall into the usual hype that you only pay for what you use.That does not mean you only run your server for 12 hours a day as it's cheaper, it actually means that if your application grows it can grow with you. When launching the new application, just add a few more nodes to handle the increased load and remove them once things settle down. Whereas you would need to get your dedicated server host to prep new hardware which could take anything from an hour to a couple of days, plus then the time it takes you to set up the server application.

Cloud platforms will be unmanaged, but you can find that some providers will offer you a managed service, but this does not come cheaply. A dedicated server is easily found with an unmanaged or managed option. If you have experience with managing or running a server then an unmanaged method is probably the way to go for you.

Coming back round to the cost element again, if you are just hosting a blog or similar then a VPS or virtual dedicated server is probably the way to go. There are also companies that offer shared hosting packages within a cloud platform giving you the cheap cost of hosting with the easy scalability and reliability that clouds offer. Be careful as some cloud providers will bill their service by the hour and so looks extremely cheap. So this may work out to be a more costly option done by the hour. Whereas others will charge you the entire month and so makes the maths a lot easer. But of course with a dedicated server you are not going to have this issue as you will just be charged per month.

However, if you have a big Facebook application you are due to launch, the cloud option definitely has to be best. Cloud software has the easy scalability that gives you the power on demand.It would be advisable to get a cloud platform to allow you to test out the idea. This can let you learn how the cloud platform works and if your application would be suitable to host this way.

You can alternatively start with a dedicated server and switch at a later date, or vice versa. Time and effort will be your only cost. If you do your research in to both methods in detail thoroughly you cannot go wrong. I hope that your next application will be a massive success and so I wish you all the best.




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