12.20.2009

Get Backlinks

First of all Merry Christmas to all my readers.The post is Christmas gift for webmasters looking for do follow social websites or forums or directories to bring inbounds link to their websites or blog to make money online with traffic generated.If you are new reader and looking how to make money online than visit my earlier post Guide to Create Blog,Start your own blog write fresh content built back links from resources below and make money with programs like google AdSense,Commission junction etc.

Top Ten Do follow Social Websites:-

  1. Digg.com
  2. Propeller.com
  3. Reddit.com
  4. Socialogs.com
  5. Indianpad.com
  6. Slashdot.org
  7. Blogmarks.net
  8. Jumptags.com
  9. Folkd.com
  10. Wirefan.com

Top Ten Do follow Forums:-

  1. Mambo Foundation
  2. Simple Machines
  3. Name Pros
  4. Loan Officer Forum
  5. IQ69 Forum
  6. Hot4s Forum
  7. Mysql Forum
  8. AMD Forum
  9. Intel Software Community
  10. CNET Forum

Top Ten Do follow Directories:-

  1. ciff2006.com
  2. fulldirectory.net
  3. airindexer.com
  4. migliana.com
  5. stingrey.biz
  6. bayengine.com
  7. sellhighbuycheap.com
  8. stentcard.com
  9. kingoflink.com
  10. elite-dir.com

If you enjoyed the post please help us spread digg it or retweet it or share on facebook.

12.13.2009

JohnChow.Com Top Money Maker Review

In this particular blog entry i would like to fetch your attention toward blog and his owner john chow who had achieved milestone in the field of online money making.Before i started my blog i regularly visit google search for the term "Make Money Online" and always find his blog at top 3 spots,I regularly visit his blog to increase my knowledge.After few months of consistent reading i decided to start my blog under same niche as john chow,Like john i too want to help people want to make extra money online.Its my dream to become blogger like john chow and want to achieve same height as john chow had for his blog"Sorry no taxes on dreams its free".

At john chow blog you will learn

How to make big money online.
How to get top search engine ranking.
How to bring traffic to your blog.

These are few features for complete story visit john chow blog.There is good news for webmasters if you want link to your blog from John Chow dot Com than review his blog and he will add your link to his blog.

6.23.2009

Getting Better Results with Amazon Associate Program


The Amazon Associate program is one of the oldest and most popular affiliate program out there. It was the first affiliate program I joined.


I didn't have a whole lot of success with it at first and forgot about it for a while. Then I decided to try and learn more about it and find ways to improve my results.

It's also been a while since I posted on this site so I thought I'd come back and share some of what's been working for me.



Easily increase Amazon Commission by 50%

One of the first things you should do is make sure you're using the tiered commission program. The more referrals you have, the higher your referral rate. The base is 4% which is pretty low for an affiliate program but Amazon has good prices and is well recognized so it seems to convert better than some other advertising programs.

You can easily increase your Amazon commisions by 50% if you can seel more than 6 items each month. Once you get to 7 referrals, your referral rate jumps to 6% and applies to all the products that you referred that month, even the ones before you hit the mark. For general products the referral fee can go up to 8.5%.

That's for general products though, consumer electronics, downloads and endless.com have their own referral rates. But if you can manage to get just 7 referrals a month you'll be much happier with your Amazon affiliate efforts. So don't just focus on high priced items, a combination of high and low priced items will help you get both quanity to reach higher levels and high commissions.

Forget about banners, write good reviews

Maybe on some sites Amazon banners or Amazon widgets work well enough for the amount of space they take up. Too much advertising like that can also turn people off. I have one site with nothing but Amazon on it and I only include links to indivudual products where appropriate. It has the highest referral rate out of any sites I have with Amazon on it.

Take the time and write thorough reviews of products you are familiar with. Make a compelling argument. Don't just copy and paste reviews from other sites. People want to know someone is being sincere and giving an honest oppinion of a product.

You don't have to make it sound better than it is. Just be honest. If you're writing a review of Product A and you think it did a good job of cleaning the grout in your bathroom but did a horrible job of cleaning your outdoor furniture then say so, even if you bought it mainly for your outdoor furniture. If you have nothing good to say about the product then be honest there too and maybe give links to other products that you've used that are better.

The most important thing is to be honest. Don't make stuff up. The people that will share links to your post recognice sincerity and will send more people to your site.


Don't forget the little things


As I mentioned before, if you refer Product A which costs $100 you will earn $4. If you seel one of Product A and 5 of Product B which costs $10 and you earn $2 for a total commission of $6. If you manage to sell one more Product B your referral rate jumps to 6% and instead of $6.40 total you earn $9.60. We're obviously talking smaller sites here but a lot of bloggers aren't making millions on their sites but a little extra beer money would be nice.

Also, remember that if someone follows one of your links everything they purchase during that referral will earn you commission. They don't even have to purchase what it was they clicked on.


Build Amazon Stores


This is going to be a lot harder and I don't recommend using a prebuilt solution. Cookie cutter sites don't cut it. This is a bit more involved and I'll try and cover it in another post.





4.14.2009

A Hard Way To Make Easy Money


A lot of poker players use this line, "a hard way to make an easy living" and I think it also applies here. This is literally going to be very hard if you want to get started.



This isn't a program where you sit and click your way to make money. Having the best technical skills or being able to program the best interactive Web 2.0 website may help but it's meaningless unless you put in a lot of physical work. I mean a lot. This might be the hardest you've ever pushed yourself.



Not everyone can do it, but I think a lot of people should try, even if you don't plan on making money from it. The rewards can be great. The affiliate program pays out 25% which is very high, and there are 10's of thousands of new customers buying every week. The top tier affiliates average over $100,000 a year.



This is not a scam but I'm going to tell you up front this isn't going to be easy. It may turn out to be the best thing you've decided to do, even if you never make a dime. If you want to learn more, continue reading below.



What is the high commission affiliate program



I'm a bit embarrassed about this, because it's an infomercial product. Things I generally stay away from. Other than this program, I think the only other infomercial product I've bought and loved (before they had infomercials) was the Kreg R3 Jr. Pocket Hole Jig System.



This one is even worse, it's one of those exercise programs. At least it's not some silly exercise gadget that promises more than it can deliver. Over the past year, I had seen the infomercials but I never gave them much thought. I haven't joined the affiliate program, and to be honest, I may never. That's not why I started using it, but I was surprised by how well the program paid and wanted to share it here.




Then recently, I decided get back into working out and was looking for an affordable set of adjustable dumbbells that I could keep under my desk. That's where I spend a lot of time each day and I wanted easy access to dumbbells to throw in something to do when I needed a quick break from programming. I got the Bayou Fitness adjustable dumbbells shown on the right. It's a pair of dumbbells that adjust from 5-25lbs in 5lb increments. They're well built and easy to use. One of the pair was a bit difficult to use. The bar wouldn't slide back into the set, but after moving some of the plates around and using it for a while, it's gotten much better.



I contacted Bayou Fitness before purchasing and they were very quick to answer my questions. It's a fairly light set, but it's been a long time since I've been doing arm exercises, so it should do me fine for a while. The biggest reason I chose this set was the price. Adjustable dumbells can go for twice this. They also have a 100lb set (2 50lb adjustable dumbbells), which are also affordable, but the drawback is it still only has 4 sets of plates, so the adjustments are increments of 10lbs. That may not be a big deal to some, but finer adjustments would be nice.




When I outgrow this set, I am looking into getting the Lifecore Corebell adjustable dumbbell set pictured to the left. It has more than double the weight but is adjustable in 5lb increments from 5-55lbs. From the looks of it, it's a similar design. It is more than double the cost, and I wasn't ready to commit that much money to it just yet.





OK, I'm dancing around the issue. This is supposed to be about making money, not picking dumbbells. I told you, promoting an infomercial product is a bit embarrassing. The reason I brought that up the adjustable dumbbells is that's how I ran across the program. I was searching around for dumbbell exercise routines to get me started when I ran across a lot, I mean A LOT of recommendations in blogs and videos for the P90X program. The more I learned, the more I was impressed.



If you want to make money with this system, you have to become the advertisement. You have to transform your body and help people do the same. You become a walking billboard. When your friends, family and coworkers see how much an improvement you made, you get to direct them to buy through you if you join the coach program.



The best part is, if you bring in a new customer, you get commissions for all their purchases as long as you're part of the program. The commissions are very high (25%) and there are plenty of opportunities for recurring sales of additional products and nutritional supplements. The drawback is you have to pay to be part of the program and you have to bust your ass using the program for 90 days to transform your body. You have the benefit that not everyone that starts the program will commit to it, so part of the competition gets trimmed there. Then you will need to show you can help others do the same. Be their coach. Like I said, this is hard, but the potential revenue is very high. At worst, you are in better shape than when you started, and hopefully continue to maintain a good fitness program.



This program seems to be intended for people that are already in somewhat good shape, but it will help them really push themselves to get even more ripped. From what I've seen, a lot of people started out in really bad shape, and made improvements. You may not be able to keep up with the people on the DVDs but keep trying and you will.



The program is affordable and you don't need a lot of equipment to get started. You can do it all in your home and you don't even need a lot of space. The videos are a bit cheesy. That's going to happen when you have someone talking for 13+ hours constantly trying to motivate you, but it's not as bad as other infomercials I've seen. The good part of all that talking is there are a lot of options. If you can't do an exercise well, Tony Horton (the instructor and developer of the program) will show you different ways of doing it that might be easier. This is important when you're just starting out. As the weeks go by, if you're really pushing yourself, you should find it easier to do the exercises, but then you'll just be pushing yourself harder. This is not easy.


If you can't do a push up, pull up or do an intense exercise program for an hour, sometimes an hour and a half every day. This is probably not where you want to start. The fitness guide that comes with the program has a fitness test with some minimum requirements. Basically, if you're a guy, you should be able to do 3 pull ups, 15 pushups, 10 curls with 20lbs, 25 sit-ups plus some other requirements. If you're a woman, 1 pull up, 3 push-ups, 10 curls with 8lb weights and 25 sit-ups. That's just my rough guide based on the fitness test.



You can download a PDF version of the P90X Fit Test before you get started and see how you do.





If you don't meet them, you can maybe take it easy and extend the first phase from 4 weeks to 6 weeks, and hope to catch up, or you might want to start with something less intense, like the Power 90 program, which is also from Tony Horton.



One of the reasons people stop an exercise program is because they get discouraged. Sometimes it's too hard, and if you can't do the exercises, it just makes you feel bad and can kill your motivation to keep going, then all you did is waste money and bum yourself out.



Maybe you're not ready for these programs at all, and that's OK. You can work up to it. You have to start somewhere.


Aren't infomercial products scams?



Eh... A lot of them are junk but not all I guess. This program is good and it seems to work. But, and there's usually a but, I did find reports that if you order through the 800 number, they push you to add more products and even automatically enroll you in different things that have recurring payments. Some people claim to do this and not tell you.



That seems to be par for the course with infomercials, so my advice, buy it from Amazon using the links I provided above. You don't have to worry about any of that.


What else do you need



You need some equipment, but it's not a lot and it's not very expensive. All you need is a set of dumbbells or resistance bands, a chin-up bar and an exercise mat.



Weights/Resistance Bands



You'll need a set of dumbbells or resistance bands. I mentioned a couple above. The adjustable dumbbells can be expensive but you can go with a set of plates and bars. Individual dumbbell sets would be much more expensive.



While $150 might seem a bit expensive for a set of dumbbells, it's not really. They are easily adjustable, so you can change weights quickly between exercises. The traditional way to do that would be to get a rack full of dumbbells (pictured left). That costs $290, plus almost $200 in shipping if you're ordering online. The Bayou dumbbells have free shipping.



Comparing the two, with the Bayou Fitness Adjustable Dumbbells, you get 5, 10, 15, 20 and 25 lb dumbbell pairs for around $150 delivered. With the dumbbell rack, you get 9 pairs of dumbbells (3, 5, 8, 10, 12, 15, 20, 25, & 30 lb) for $500. With the adjustable dumbbells, you lose a little bit of intermediate weights and they only go up to 25lbs, but you save a lot of space and even more money.




If you want more weight, the Lifecore Corebells (pictured left) seem to be a good choice. The design is similar to the Bayou fitness adjustable dumbbells, but they go from 5-50lbs in 5lb increments. They're cheaper than other adjustable dumbbells and I like them better because they are smaller. The Bowflex dumbbells in particular are very wide.





A set of resistance bands is a lot cheaper, and great if you travel a lot. The videos always have someone demonstrating the exercises with the bands. I think when the bands first came out, they were seen more as something for women. In the P90X videos I've seen, it's always a guy that's using them, which I think was smart.


Chin up bar



These are pretty affordable. They mount in a doorway and they can be as simple as a straight bar, or little more advanced.




The one pictured to the right, is the closest I could find to the P90X Chin-Up Bar, but a bit cheaper.


If you want even cheaper, the Iron Gym Total Upper Body Workout Bar doesn't have as many hold options, but can save you a couple more bucks.



If you need some help with the chin-up exercises, the DVDs demonstrate how to use a chair for assistance. I assume you have a chair you can use for that :)


Exercise Mat





OK, it's really a yoga mat, but you can call it an exercise mat if you want. One of the DVD's you'll be doing every week is Yoga and a mat will make things easier. For other exercises, especially the Ab Ripper X workout, a mat will help provide cushion to make the exercises more comfortable.



The mat pictured on the left I feel is the best mat you can get for a home gym. It's a little pricey, but it's currently on sale. I recommend you spend the little bit extra on it to help make your experience a little less brutal. It's one thing to feel the pain in your muscles as you work out, feeling pain in your knees or spine as your working out on a hard floor is just pointless pain.




If spending $80 on an exercise mat seems a bit too much, the one pictured on the right is only around $20 and about as close to the quality you'll get of the more expensive one in this price range.



Whichever mat you get, you'll want to thoroughly clean it when you first get it, and you may want to do that a few times until the smell wears out or the coating is fully removed to make it less slick.


Sportscream



You want some sort of analgesic creme, to help with muscle soreness. Since you'll be working out almost every day, you don't want anything to slow you down. This is very important, especially in the beginning. I've always used Sportscream or something else that's odor free. When you're finished with your exercises and rested, a warm shower followed by the analgesic creme will make waking up the next morning a little more pleasant.


Recovery Drink



The workouts are tough, it's nice to have something to help replenish you after a workout. You're going to be sweating a lot too. At the very least, make sure you drink at least 8 glasses of water a day. Otherwise, you may wake up feeling hungover due to dehydration.



The producers of P90X have their own recovery drink, but there are others available that are less expensive recovery drinks. If you live near a GNC, they are a good local source.



Total Cost



Getting started is fairly affordable. The DVDs, exercise mat, chin up bar, and adjustable dumbbells come out to just under $300 ($200 if you go with bands instead of adjustable dumbbells). That's significantly less than a year's gym membership and even half the cost of the cheapest Bowflex home gym (Bowflex PR1000 Home Gym)



So how do you make money?



There are a couple of ways. The easiest is to do the program, submit your success story to the website and hope you win one of the prizes. There's a monthly $1,000 drawing and a $25,000 grand prize.



If you don't feel lucky, you pay a few bucks a month to join the affiliate program and become a coach. You'll make 25% commission as well as save 25% on anything you buy for yourself. The key to success here is to be able to communicate well, motivate others, help them when they need it and probably most importantly, prove that you know what you're talking about by doing a great job transforming your own body.


My Fitness History



I've never been in really great shape ever. I was never really into sports but I would exercise from time to time. After college, I started a stressful job and gained a bit of weight. I had an injury which required physical therapy. My doctor recommended a physical therapist center that was inside one of the best gyms in the area which I could use after my physical therapy sessions. I never used it. I felt out of place there. Everyone was in very good shape. But it did inspire me to do something.



I started biking to work as much as I could. Then I joined another gym that was a lot cheaper and I felt more comfortable working out there. If you have a local YMCA with a good gym, I recommend you look into it. The one I was using was great. It had a ton of cardio equipment as well as free weights and machines. A few times a week, I would hit an exercise bike, then do my program on the strength training machines. I didn't get ripped or huge but I saw a lot of improvement and lost a lot of weight.



Things started getting better, then I changed jobs and didn't have any time to work out. I had a new gym membership in my new location, but I hardly had the time or energy to go.



After that, life threw one of it's curveballs and I had a very rough couple of years. Most of my meals were from drive-thrus and grease trucks. When it was all over, I was in the worst physical and emotional state of my life. At 6' tall, I weighed 220lbs. What's worse, my blood pressure and cholesterol were very high. My BP was over 150/95 and my at rest heart rate was almost 100bpm. I just witnessed first hand what those risk factors can result in, and I had to do something about it.



I didn't have a lot of money. Hell, I hardly had any money. Joining a gym was out of the question, so I decided to start jogging. That didn't work out too well. I knew it wasn't going to be pretty, so I started out one day after it got dark. After 1 block, I was beat. I thought I was going to pass out. It wasn't that my legs were tired. My heart was racing and I couldn't breath. The back of my throat was burning.



I kept at it a while and did a little better, but I never liked running. Instead I started walking. I felt it was better to do something less intense, for a longer period of time. So I started walking every day for at least 30 minutes, eventually an hour.



After I started feeling a little better, and the weather improved, I got my bike out of storage and added a couple of days of riding each week. It started with only 3-4 miles and then I would do 7-8.



I needed something I could use when the weather wasn't great. For that I turned to craigslist. Exercise equipment is something that's easy to get cheap used. So many people buy stuff, never use it, and eventually want to get rid of it. Check the free sections too. That's where I got mine.



After about 4 months, my blood pressure and heart rate were normal and I had lost 40 lbs. I now weighed what I did back in high school. No six pack abs, no buldging muscles, but I felt great and it really helped me get passed what I had been through.



Recently, I was busy with some things, and I slipped a little. I gained back about half the weight but my heart rate and BP were fine. For the past few weeks, I started my cardio up again and added some weight training. I didn't want to jump right into the P90X program without warming up my heart and lungs.



Yesterday, I did my first P90X workout. Chest and back, then an ab workout. It really kicked my ass. It was the hardest workout I think I ever had. The DVD has a good flow. It includes the warm-up and stretching, as well as the cool down but man is that part in between tough! The ab workout? I don't even want to think about it. The adjustable workouts were great. Easy to move between weights and they don't take up a lot of space.


If the affiliate program is so great, why aren't I doing it?



Right now, I only care about doing the program myself. I'm not sure how hard I plan on pushing myself. I started out looking for some dumbbell exercises and got this whole program instead.



There's also a nutritional aspect to the program. If I was after optimal results to show how great the program is, I'd probably want to change my diet a little bit. Right now my diet is far from horrible, but that's just not something I want to worry about at this point.



Maybe in 3 months I'll have a different opinion, but for now, I'm just doing this for myself.




3.13.2009

Moving beyond Shared Hosting

You worked hard building your website, and it has payed off! The amount of activity on your site has far exceeded your expectations, and as a result, you need to look for more advanced hosting options.



These days, you have a lot of options including Virtual Private Servers (VPS), Dedicated Servers and Server Colocation.



If you're confused about which option to choose, this post should hopefully clear some of that up.



Why Do I Need To Upgrade If I'm Not Using All My Bandwidth Or Disk Quota?



This is a question people commonly ask. One day they get an email from their web hosting company telling them they need to upgrade their account to a dedicated server. So they go look at their stats and see their not using anywhere near their allocated bandwidth or disk space.



The reason for this is, you're not really allocated any actual bandwidth or disk space. Many web hosting companies offer more than they can deliver. Some companies even offer "unlimited" bandwidth and disk space, but there are obviously hardware limits. They do this because they know that most of their clients will only use a tiny fraction of the server resources.



If you have a shared account, you're probably sharing the server with hundreds of other users. I remember one account I had a client on where there around 800 other accounts on the server. Their smallest package offered 1000GB of transfer. The server seemed to only have one network card connected. Even if it was a 1GB network card, the maximum bandwidth available would be 220,000 GB. Divide that by 800 and you only can assign 275GB per customer. Not to mention a 1,000MBs Internet connection would cost them around $25k.



So obviously, if web hosts had to actually deliver what they marketed, they wouldn't be in business very long.



But bandwidth and disk space isn't the limit most people hit. If your shared hosting plan promised you 1,000GB of bandwidth, you'd probably have to get somewhere around 2-3 million visitors a month. Not everyone is going to be able to manage that, no matter how hard they try.



An inefficient application on the other hand, can use a significant amount of memory and CPU, even with a handful of users. If you read the fine print when you sign up for a hosting account, you'll see that they make provisions to disable accounts if they exceed resource levels. Some hosts will try and shuffler accounts around servers to accommodate their clients, but they have their limits.



Even if you're not using all your bandwidth, you may want to upgrade your account if you feel having a dedicated CPU and memory, or other hardware enhancements might benefit your site.



Should I Choose a VPS, Dedicated Server, Managed Server, or Colocation?



So you decided you need to expand your hosting package. But which solution is right for you?



To answer that, lets look at what it takes to put a website online:



Secure, conditioned space


Servers can be expensive and more importantly you want your server someplace where people can't mess with it. No pulling out plugs or drives to see what happens. Servers also generate a lot of heat and work better in a cool environment.

Power


Servers need electricity to run. Ideally, you want your server to be on a power set up that has backup battery power for short outages, diesel backup generators for extended power outages in addition to a connection to the power company. Even better, that whole system should be redundant, 2 power connections, 2 sets of generators, 2 battery backup systems.

Network connection


If you want your server to be accessible by people outside the server room, you need to have a connection to the Internet. Because you want your connection to be up all the time, you want the data center to have multiple connections to different ISPs and their infrastructure configured to failover properly in case one goes down.

Server


No matter what you're running, you need a computer to run it.

Operating System


Your need a base to install all your other software and to manage your hardware. That's what an Operating System basically does. You can choose Windows, Linux or Unix (Solaris).

Other server software


On top of the OS, you'll need software services to put your website on. A web server, a database server, an application server, email, etc.



VPS Hosting



VPS stands for Virtual Private Server. It is the next step above shared hosting. Your web hosting company will manage everything that it takes to get a server connected to the internet in their data center, and sell a portion of that server.



In these cases, you are sharing a server, but with far fewer people. From your perspective, it looks like you're getting your own server. You have a set amount of disk space (usually on a RAID array), a set amount of memory and sometimes a set amount of CPU power. In some cases, you use more CPU resources if they are available. For example, you're VPS is on a dual processor system and you are guaranteed 1/8th the CPU capacity. If you're running something CPU intensive, and there is available CPU that nobody else is using, you can use more than your allocated share.



With a VPS, you can have a choice of what operating system to run. It doesn't matter what OS the host server is running. You get full control over almost every aspect of the operating system, as if you had your own server. You do need to know how to manage your operating system and other server software. Some hosting companies will manage that for you as well for additional fees.


Dedicated Server



With a dedicated server, you are renting a server and everything that goes along with it to get it connected to the internet in a data center. Your hosting company is responsible for keeping your server hardware running and that your power and internet connection are up. They will install the base operating system, which may include some common server software, but after that you're on your own.



There are many packages available for dedicated hosting from single CPU Celeron Processors up to Dual Quad-Core systems.



You can have more than one server with any provider and in most cases, they will be able to set up a Virtual Private Network (VPN) for all your servers, so that you can communicate with them securely on the local network, and not have to use up your bandwidth allocation.


Managed Server



A managed server is similar to a dedicated server, but it also includes other Managed Services, to help those that can not, or do not want to maintain their own servers. Typical managed services include patching operating systems and server software so it's up to date, monitoring hardware health, replace failed drives, managing firewall settings and things of that nature. Different providers have different types (and quality) of service.



Prices can vary greatly, and unfortunately, price is not always a good indicator of quality. In general, managed servers are more expensive than dedicated servers, but that difference in price may be worth it if you don't know how to maintain your own system, or you would rather focus on building your applications or selling your services.



Just like with dedicated hosting, most providers can set up a VPN if you have multiple servers.


Colocation



With colocation, your provider will give you space in their data center, and a connection to their network. You need to provide the physical server, and everything that goes on top of it such as the operating system and other server software.



If something fails on your server, such as a hard drive, it's up to you to go and change it. Many data centers will give you hands on support options for an hourly fee. If you want to upgrade the CPUs, you can ship the CPUs to them, you power off your server, and they'll do physical work of replacing the CPU. Some will even offer support for certain operating systems and other hardware.



You can get colocation packages for as little as one server or as much as a cage full of racks. If you have multiple servers, most colocation providers can set up a VLAN (virtual local area network) so that you can communicate with your other servers privately. At some point, if you have many servers, you will want to look into getting your own networking equipment such as a switch and firewall.



With colocation, you pay for space, power and networking. You can put in a single Celeron server or a 4-way Quad Core Opteron Server and pay roughly the same. I say roughly because if you have a lot of CPUs, drives and memory you will need more electrical power and may need to pay extra. With a dedicated server, you'd be paying hundreds of dollars more.





3.03.2009

How To NOT Start A Start-up

I saw this video the other day while searching for some information and I was absolutely in shock! While I have to say it's pretty cool to have that in your garage, and I myself have some older servers that I use to mess around with, this is the wrong way to start your start-up's data center.




I can't think of a single reason why anyone would do that. Some of the servers look like P3's and P4's. There might be some very old Xeons in there. Looks like they were picked up used. If you're thinking of doing something similar don't. In the rest of the post I'll go over the details on why with a better alternative.



Maintaining Older Hardware



First, while a lot of software is backwards compatible, especially Linux which is what I think they are using, you sometimes run into compatibility problems. In addition, you have to worry about getting replacement parts if something on the server dies. While hard drives and memory may be easy to get, things like case fans, and CMOS batteries aren't. Finding a replacement CMOS battery might wind up costing about 25-50% of what they bought a server for.


Cost



I did a quick look on eBay for some of the computers they are using. Between everything including the server cabinets, servers, desktops, switches, router, drives, cables, accessories, we're probably talking $2,500-$3,000 easy. For that price you can get a brand new server from one of the major server vendors or build one yourself. It would probably even perform better.



Power is another issue. Electricity isn't free and if they're planning on running the data center in their garage, like they said, then they have to power the servers 24/7/365. Even at idle, a typical computer can draw 60W of power. That's just a regular PC, not a server with extra fans, and multiple drives, but lets use that 60W as a baseline. Now lets check Energy Australia's Energy Calculator. I'm pretty sure he's in Australia. So, 20 machines, 60W each running 168 hours a week comes out to $1464.50 a year, or $122/month.



That's a good chunk of change to power such old hardware. That doesn't even factor in the cost of air conditioning in the summer!



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Let's compare that to this Compaq Proliant DL380 G5 Server. Click on the picture on the right for more details. Maxed out with 2 Quad Core CPU's all 8 Memory banks loaded as well as 8 SAS drives filling all the bays, it's only at around 400W at 100% utilization! That's less than $500/year ($41/mo) in electricity. About 1/3 what the dinosaur data center will cost. Since he seems to be a hands on person, he could have even go the build your own rack server route.



The server with 1 Quad Core no memory or drives, goes for just over $2k as of today. 1CPU, $200-300 for memory and some drives to get started and that would have been a much better use of that money spent on eBay.


Time is Money



From what I could figure out, it's been over 8 months since he started and it doesn't look like the project went live. There's no mention of it in the blog anyway. The last entry was over a month ago.


Internet Connectivity



In one of the videos he mentions getting a "big pipe" to connect the servers to the Internet. That's not cheap. Even a single T1 is about $300/month and these days, a T1 (1.5Mb/s) is not considered a big pipe.



Websites also don't become successful overnight. You can start out small and probably the best thing this person should have done, if they couldn't use a shared hosting account, is get a dedicated server. That way they wouldn't pay any up-front hardware costs, have to worry about maintaining hardware and would have their server in a real data center with multiple redundant Internet connections and they could easily increase their bandwidth as usage increased.



As of today, you can find dedicated server hosting from a number of different reputable companies with prices starting as low as $79.00 a month and bandwidth of 500GB-4000GB. For reference, a T1 line sending out data all day long for a month can only handle around 350GB of data. With a dedicated server, you get a burstable connection. So if you have a big spike, your network connection can handle it. Usually up to 10Mb/s but in some case you can get up to 100Mb/s or more.



Affordable Dedicated Hosting


Here are a few links with prices (as of today) for some popular and affordable dedicated server packages.























































Provider CPU Memory Disk Bandwidth Price/mo
LunarPages Celeron - 2 Dual Core Xeons 1GB - 4GB 80GB - 4x400GB SATA or 4x146GB SCSI 1000GB - 4000GB $79.00 - $800
IPOWERWEB Celeron 3.06GHz 512MB - 1024MB 80GB - 250GB SATA 500GB - 1500GB $129.00 - $169.00
GoDaddy Celeron - Quad Core 2.83GHz 1GB - 4GB 120GB - 2x300GB SATA 500GB - 2000GB $79.99 - $419.91
Host Gator Pentium 4 2.4Ghz - Quad Core 3210 Xeon 1GB - 4GB 80GB - 4x400GB SATA or 4x146GB SCSI 1500GB - 2500GB $174.00 - $374
Pronet Hosting Intel Core 2 Duo 3.06GHz 2GB 2x160GB SATA 2000GB $99.95


If he wanted to use his own hardware he could have also bought a beefy server, used some sort of virtualization technology such as Zen, VMWare or Solaris Containers (Zones my personal favorite) and added hardware and shifted around virtual servers as necessary. Once he had his website built, he would then ship the server out to a good colocation facility which would probably run around $100/mo.



This all looks like a lot of fun, but in the end they probably delayed the launch of their product and spent more money than if they bought one new, powerful server or got a dedicated server or VPS to start out.




1.30.2009

Update on MSN/Live and Yahoo Traffic

It's been almost a month since I started working on getting more traffic from Yahoo and MSN/Live.com search engines on one of my sites, but my efforts seem to be paying off. All the changes were on site, mainly changes to my robots.txt, sitemap.xml and pinging updates when the site ads new content.



Compare to the previous period, traffic improved across all major search engines. Google was already giving me a good amount of visitors but traffic from Google increased over 17%. Traffic from Yahoo! search increased 50% and MSN/Live.com traffic had the biggest improvement of over 180%. Ask.com traffic improved by over 90%.



Google still is my major source of search engine traffic by far but these results seem promising.



Live.com has indexed a lot more of this site as a result of the changes. Before the changes, Live.com had only indexed about 1% of the site, now it's over 10% of the site and MSNBot seems to be visiting more frequently. Every time I check the number increases and my domain score is 5 out of 5.



The increased index pages helped bring some more long tail keyword traffic from Microsoft's search engines. Since there are still 10 times as many pages that can be indexed by MSNBot that haven't, I'm hoping traffic from MSN and Live.com continue to grow. Yahoo seems to have indexed the pages well. While I'm expecting search traffic growth from Yahoo!, my expectations are less.



One thing to note about traffic from Live.com is that log analyzers such as AWStats may be misleading. Microsoft has a crawler they use to detect cloaking. It acts like a normal website visitor and downloads all images, stylesheets, javascript, and so on. The problem is that when it accesses a page, it uses a referrer header to make it appear is if it came from a search on live.com. While Microsoft claims to have fixed the problem, I still see this behavior across different sites and the invalid search engine keywords being affected. 



Google Anlytics seems to recognize these fake search engine referrers and doesn't report them as genuine search engine traffic.



1.23.2009

Tell Googlebot to Crawl Faster


Google's Webmaster Tools has changed the interface that allows a webmaster to control how fast or how slow Googlebot crawls a site.



I just noticed the change today, in the past, there were 3 radio buttons for normal, faster and slower. Many webmasters could only set it to normal and slower because faster was disabled unless Google thought your site really needed to be updated faster and could handle it.



As you can see from the screenshot, the control has now been changed to a slider and presumably everyone can set it how they wish, but it's likely that Google may override the settings. Also, setting the crawl rate faster doesn't mean Googlebot will visit your site more frequently. The crawl rate just determines how spaced out one request will be from the other. If Google thinks your site should get 200 visits a day, you're going to get 200 visits a day. If you set a faster crawl rate, that just means those request could happen within the same hour.





One neat thing about the new interface is that it shows you what Google's recommended crawl rate for your site is. One one of sites the crawl rate was faster than the other. In the past, you could only judge by seeing your crawl stats. The top chart shows the number of visits, the second the number of kilobytes downloaded and the third the average time spent downloading a page.



As you can see from the charts, this site seems to be getting slower and the recommended crawl rate was set a little slower than on other sites. Probably because Google thought there was too much strain on the server. This wasn't the case. The drop in response time had to do with the use of a third-party api but the site had plenty of capacity. In this case, I instructed Googlebot to crawl faster.



But sometimes, you really do want to slow down your crawl rate. On another site that is fairly new, Googlebot visits the site 10 times more than real visitors do. It's not a site I'm actively promoting yet and while I don't mind getting the many pages crawled, it seems a waste to waste so much bandwidth on crawling compared to the actual site traffic. In that case I slowed it down.



If you want your site to be crawled less, setting a slower crawl rate can help accomplish that. For instance, if you only want Googlebot to visit your site 100 times a day, you would set your crawl rate so that Googlebot only visits ever 864 seconds.



To help figure out what you should set your crawl rate to take 86,400 and divide it by how often Googlebot should crawl your site. 86,400 is the number of seconds in a day.

If you're not familiar with the Google Webmaster Tools interface, these are the steps to make the change. The placement has also changed:


  1. Log into Google Webmaster Tools
  2. Click on the website you'd like to change in the Dashboard
  3. Select Settings from the left menu bar
  4. Scroll down to the Crawl rate section
  5. Slide the slider either towards faster or slower
  6. Click the Save button

Remember that these are just recommendations and Google may decide to do what it feels is best.