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  Post #1 (permalink)   06-20-2004, 10:09 AM
HD Wizard
 
Join Date: Jul 2003
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With VPS/VDS becoming more prominent in the hosting industry, I wanted to know the differences between the two.
Some are more obvious than others.
Not just the differences, but also the advantages and disadvantages.

Here are a few to get started:

VPS has root access - Reseller accounts don't
Reseller accounts are normally cheaper than a VPS
Reseller accounts have everything installed and setup, but you might need to tweak settings and install various things on a new VPS.
You have to pay a lot more to have a control panel on a VPS than a reseller account as they need a license for each VPS
 
 
 


Old
  Post #2 (permalink)   06-22-2004, 03:36 AM
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Status: vpscolo is offline
A VPS can be tuned to your exact requirements and have the exact OS you want.
You get more CPU shared than a reseller

Rus
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Old
  Post #3 (permalink)   06-22-2004, 05:52 AM
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You can reboot a VPS when you want without effecting the other VPS on the same server, good if you are having a problem.
With a VPS you need a bit of experience with linux and know how to run a server, with a reseller everything is taken care of for you already.
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Old
  Post #4 (permalink)   06-22-2004, 11:30 AM
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you can't screw your sever up with a reseller account...

with a VPS you have the almighty root access and can take it out not even knowing
 
 
 


Old
  Post #5 (permalink)   06-22-2004, 07:47 PM
iserlohn
 
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It all boils down to the amount of separation you have with the other users on the server. With a VPS, you get a little more separation from the other users (normally through a kernel hack, such as contexts or jails, basically super-chroot) compared to reseller access.

Usually you can see (but not modify) which processes other users are running on reseller servers. With a VPS you don't see anything about the other users in the same server, and you get full control of your little area. This can be a good thing or bad thing, depending on how the server is managed.
 
 
 


Old
  Post #6 (permalink)   06-22-2004, 07:48 PM
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Join Date: Jun 2004
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Sorry, that was me with a wrong login.

Quote:
Originally posted by iserlohn
It all boils down to the amount of separation you have with the other users on the server. With a VPS, you get a little more separation from the other users (normally through a kernel hack, such as contexts or jails, basically super-chroot) compared to reseller access.

Usually you can see (but not modify) which processes other users are running on reseller servers. With a VPS you don't see anything about the other users in the same server, and you get full control of your little area. This can be a good thing or bad thing, depending on how the server is managed.
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Old
  Post #7 (permalink)   12-15-2006, 03:08 AM
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And what's more proitable in terms of the amount of clients I can take on?
 
 
 


Old
  Post #8 (permalink)   03-26-2007, 04:47 AM
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Join Date: Sep 2006
Posts: 26

Status: turbovps is offline
VPSs advantages compared to a shared hosting service

* Guarantees CPU, Memory and network resources
* Full root access
* Install and manage your own applications
* Isolation and Advanced security
* Host multiple domains
* Manage your own web and mail server
* Start and stop applications
* Reboot your own VPS
 
 
 


Old
  Post #9 (permalink)   04-03-2007, 06:40 AM
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Join Date: Jan 2007
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Cyberpet View Post
And what's more proitable in terms of the amount of clients I can take on?
You can crammed lots of clients on the server, but think about qulity of services and how many clients can you support staff actually support.
 
 
 
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