Archive for the ‘Site Admin’ Category

New Web Projects

Author: Pete

There’s something more than a little wrong, when despite having quite a few regular readers, you write posts intended for none of them, but instead intended for a machine.

The machine I refer to is named googlebot. Just by talking about it I may destroy the entire purpose of this post, but I feel myself needing to pander to our ‘flesh and blood’ readers.

Basically, the way that search engines work is that they send programs ‘crawling’ around the internet like insects, digesting content of websites and listing and ordering them for their users to find.

So, when you start a new website, the most important thing you can do is get your site listed on a page that will be crawled by one of these programs. If the program sees the link, it may follow it, and your site may get indexed, which means people will start to find your site (in a simple world).

I’m fortunate to have this blog crawled almost daily by these programs, so by talking about my new sites, it increases the likelihood that they’ll be indexed and that people actually interested in their content (i.e. probably not you) will find them.

So…

Every now and again I feel the need to start a new website. Sometimes they get built, sometimes domain names get purchased and sometimes the idea fizzles before even getting out of my mind. Two of these ideas have made the significant step of making it live, now time will tell whether they stand the test of time.

Game Match – www.gamematch.co.uk

Game Match is the result of a longheld idea of mine that people should be able to trade their video games with each other without paying fees to ebay or other sites and without trading their games in under ridiculous schemes such as those found at EB Games.

I have grand plans of a technically complex site which looks at your collection, your desires and suggests trades, but until then, this site will be based around a forum and people manually communicating with each other.

There are a few pitfalls involved in an idea like this, but I believe that the positives outweigh them, and if I can build a community, then the opportunity is certainly there for further development.

HP Gaming Blog – hpgaming.wordpress.net

With thousands of gaming oriented blogs out on the web (including this one in the past), you have to have a niche if you want an audience.

Ever since I got into writing about games I’ve wanted to separate them from this blog. Then the idea came to me that I could combine my interest in Hewlett-Packard (my employer and recent entrant into the gaming industry by buying VoodooPC) with my interest in gaming by writing the HP Gaming Blog.

The blog will focus on general gaming news and reviews and new products and services from HP. Where possible I’ll be trying to get comments from those actually involved, which has begun already after Rahul Sood (ex CEO of VoodooPC now CTO of HP Gaming) responded to a question I asked him.

Whether or not this is actually a niche anyone is interested in will become clear, but for the meantime, I’m pretty excited about giving it a go.

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On the 8th August (if my billing records are to be believed) I signed up to be part of the Lunarpages web hosting family, and nearly five months on, I feel qualified to write a post about my experiences.

Before I get too far into this post, I’m going to be completely up front. If you sign up for lunarpages using this link I will supposedly get money.

I say supposedly because I never have yet.

So. I hear you asking “how can you be unbiased if by signing me up, you get money?”

The answer is simple. I can and will. I’m all about honesty and openness, so at the end of this if you want to sign up with lunarpages, then I would appreciate you rewarding my work by using that link. But if you don’t want to, then that is a great choice also.

Ok, let’s get started.

Overview

Lunarpages is very controversial across the web because of a) their marketing strategies and methods and b) the service they provide or don’t provide and some of the rules and decisions they’ve supposedly made in regards to their service.

I’ll quickly outline what the web says about these two points, and then go into my experience.

Web Criticisms

http://www.diagnose-me.com/sucks/lunarpages.html – Early 2004

This is the second ranked page when searching “lunarpages” on google, so is a pretty serious problem for lunarpages. So it’s important that we look at their complaints. They are:

  • Emails disappearing – They claim to have lost between 1% and 3% of the 1400 emails per day being generated from their site.
  • Threats of service termination due to two out of three thousand emails being marked as spam
  • Complicated story about how lunarpages ran various scripts which ultimately “crippled” and then “deleted” their website. Supposedly this action occurred due to a site that shared their server breaching terms.

Other interesting points from that page:

  • Lunarpages owns “typo” versions of the site including dignose-me.com and diagnose-me.net.
  • Lunarpages are accused of creating pro-Lunarpages sites, and posting false reviews on review sites.

http://www.dawodu.com/lunarp1.htm – August 2005

This site is slightly lower ranked in google, but still significant, so worth looking at. Their complaints are:

  • Was accused of ‘spamming’ (seemingly in error) and ultimately had his account canceled.

My Thoughts

Ok, so having heard all of that, the author’s goal has probably been achieved, why risk going with them? However, I want to share my experience.

Again, this is just my experience, the experience of someone who has relatively low traffic, and doesn’t use all the features.

I came from a site (2mhost) that was useless. The support was appalling (hosted in India I think and never able to answer my questions helpfully) and the site was almost always down.

So when I signed up with lunarpages I had high expectations of the quality of service. Initially I was not completely impressed. I had my site availability monitored by siteuptime which I can definitely recommend. Here’s the results.

peteandmegan.com lunarpages outages

So, I went through a patch during the middle of September that was pretty unpleasant. But importantly, no emails seemed to get bounced, and the outage times were relatively low. We never had outages in a single day of more than three hours, and when you look at the outages as a percentage of the whole, it works out that the site has been up 99.48% of the time. I don’t think anyone should complain about a statistic like that.

I’m on the “basic” hosting plan, which is $6.95 per month (important to note that to get this price you have to pay for 24 months in advance, a risky proposition).

For this $6.95 you get an impressive array of services, including; free domain name, unlimited number of MySQL Databases, 35000 Megabytes Storage, 800 Gigabytes Data Transfer and 1 Addon Domain. plus a whole lot of services I don’t use and add questionable value.

It really was like Christmas when I signed up and was promised 35000mb of storage. I had been trying to live within 50mb at my previous host, so was stoked. The 800gb of transfer data was also a weight off my mind, and started me thinking of ways to use it all.

Since the move, all my sites have shown strong growth. I believe it’s a combination of the increased uptime, and the mentality I have now of publishing anything and everything I can, as I’m not constrained by storage limits or bandwidth problems.

But I should address my thoughts to the concerns expressed above.

Firstly, to their experiences with lunarpages support. I think in both cases, it would appear the lunapages may have been a bit overbearing and rash (bear in mind we’re only hearing one side of this story). However in the first case, I wouldn’t be surprised if the actions of the webmaster in question were quite suspect. Also, I would hazard a guess that in both cases, the communication from the webmasters was less than positive.

We’ve all heard the saying “you catch more flies with honey than you do with vinegar.” This is the way we should all interact with support services.

Helpdesks are not there to give us whatever we want. They sit in between two parties, the customers and the management. They’re responsible for implementing the companies policies, and try to support customers in using these policies as best they can. If you seem to (or are) breaching a companies terms (no matter whether you agree with them or not) and you attack the helpdesk staff, then you shouldn’t be surprised when you don’t get what you want (i.e. your account gets canceled).

I also wonder whether lunarpages had the “live support” they do now back in 04/05 as this makes a huge difference.

A few times when something has gone wrong, I’ve jumped onto the live support and had an answer in a few minutes. This is hugely preferable to communication by email, which can never beat live support, no matter how fast the responses are.

The other complaint they had was about the advertising methods (i.e. false websites and reviews of themselves). If they do indeed do this, then I would consider this to be unreasonable promotion, and I wouldn’t attempt to justify it.

However, in some situations I can understand it. This may not apply to them, but when a new company or website is just starting up it can be pretty tough to get enough critical mass to make it in the market. With a few of my websites, I’m guilty of self promotion on various forums and websites, so I can’t really bring myself to be too critical of lunarpages for self promotion.

The important point though is whether what they’re saying is true. If they’re saying “great service, and greater than 99% uptime” and aren’t delivering it, then this is inexcusable. If they’re saying it and it’s true, then it’s still not excusable, but perhaps a bit more understandable, at least for me.

Conclusions

I’m quite aware that the last section was quite positive towards lunarpages, but that’s just how it is. My only qualm was the outages, and these (now that I’ve crunched the numbers) seem very reasonable.

Some may accuse me of being an employee of lunarpages or friend or whatever, but it’s not the case. Look up my phone number and call me, I’ll be happy to talk to you about my experiences.

So should you sign up? Having read those negative reports, if your site is going to be similar to those sites (i.e. many emails, scripts sending emails etc) then I would have some serious, written discussions with lunarpages before getting into bed with them.

I believe it’s quite possible that due to some of their policies and relationships with other companies, they may be more likely to overreact to some situations than other web hosting services.

However, if you just run a normal site, with the desire for freedom from storage and bandwidth limits, then I would definitely recommend you give lunarpages a go. If you do, then I would again request that you use this link and that you chuck me an email so that I can check that lunarpages are actually paying out when they’re supposed to.

Finally, I hope this post has been of help to you, and rest assured that I will keep this post updated as my experience with lunarpages continues.

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Happy in our new home

Author: Pete

Well, it’s Sunday night NZ time, and peteandmegan.com and americascupmagazine.com are safe and sound on the new server.

There have been a few trials during the move, but nothing major. The time spent waiting for DNS addresses to propagate was the biggest pain. You would have thought that there was a better system.

There was one problem that was a bit tricky, and I found interesting since I’m a geek, so I’ll share it here rather than boring Megan.

At my old site, my wordpress directory for americascupmagazine was in the directory below the directory of the site. The way that this is handled is that there is a setting in the wordpress config (which is set up after installing it and logging in) to direct the loading of various pages.

I guess I could have put in ../wordpress, but instead I put in www.centovate.com/wordpress (the actual address of the rest of the site was www.centovate.com/americascupmagazine).

On the new server I’ve abandoned centovate, and so the site is www.peteandmegan.com/americascupmagazine and www.peteandmegan.com/americascupmagazine/wordpress.

However, we had copied the mySQL database and the directories over byte for byte so guess what happened.

When I tried to log in to my wordpress control panel, every time it sent me to www.centovate.com/wordpress.

It may seem simple now that I’ve told you the problem, but for the life of me (well, about ten minutes) I couldn’t figure it out.

In the end all I had to do was go into the hosting control panel, then into the mySQL editor and change the entry in the row with option_name of “siteurl” and option_value of “www.centovate.com/wordpress” of the options table to www.americascupmagazine.com/wordpress.

So the moral is, if you can’t figure out why your wp-admin directory is sending you back to your old (or some other) address, then have a look at the options table of your mySQL database.

Toodles.

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First real post

Author: Pete

Hi everyone.

Welcome to the all new peteandmegan.com. If you’re here, you’ve probably heard the sad news that nocents is eventually going offline. So this is where I’ll be blogging in the near future.

I can’t guarantee frequency, but hopefully it will be a new beginning in terms of content and passion for blogging. I’ll be focussing on the games I’m playing, recent news, sports and what’s going on in my life.

As you can see from the test post below, Megan also has an account, so hopefully we might see some blogging from her.

We should have a working RSS feed, so feel free to use it.

Later, Pete.

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