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Here are eight reasons why you should consider choosing interactive, digital flipbooks instead of boring and static PDFs. Check them out!
2 installed. A VPS operates very much like a co-located dedicated server machine, where you can reboot the operating system, reinstall the operating system, and even have root access, all for a modest price. You’ll find a VPS to be an entirely satisfactory solution for production service. What are the system requirements for this server? A Linux VPS account with 1 gb memory and 30 gb of drive space will do nicely for this project . It’s possible to run with less memory than that, even as low as 256 mb memory, but you’ll have to give up email virus scanning and the webmin graphical interface for Linux. I strongly recommend at least a 512 mb account, but 1 gb or more is preferred. If you run your server with everything, including the ClamAV email filter, you will need about 600 mb, so it’s nice to have 1 gb of memory, or more if you can afford it. I happen to be running 2 gb. It’s easy to find economical accounts like that for under $10/month, and if you look around you can find them below $5/month. Even $2 to $3 per month is not unheard of if you pay quarterly or biannually. Look around at lowendbox.com for the best deals. Why a VPS instead of a dedicated server? In a word – cost. It’s the objective of every successful business operator to keep costs down. A dedicated server has the up-front cost for building a computer system to be used as the server machine, as well as co-location costs to place the server in a commercial server room so it can have a commercial Internet connection. The VPS account includes a connection to a commercial Internet account. You aren’t going to get away with operating a hosting server on a residential broadband connection (residential DSL or cable service). That’s because residential service will block certain ports that you’ll need. You could arrange for a business broadband connection that doesn’t block ports, but business broadband service is considerably more expensive than residential service. You’ re a lot better off financially with a VPS. Why not a Windows server? The knee-jerk reaction of many new server operators who are n’t familiar with Linux is to consider a Windows server. While you can always do that, I don’t recommend it. In the first place a Windows VPS is going to require a lot more resources than Linux, so it will cost you a lot more each month. That’s because you can’t get away from the huge graphical overhead of Windows (note: Windows Server 2008 & above can be installed as a command line interface), where Linux can be reduced to command line operation. There are also Windows server licensing fees. While you can easily find a suitable Linux VPS in the $5 to $10 per month range, a Windows VPS will start at more like $30/month. Then there is the dimension of reliability. The low-overhead command line environment of Linux is much more reliable than Windows environments, often being able to run for many months without the need to reboot. For those reasons I would n’t recommend Windows for a production server platform. Which Linux operating system to install? When you open your VPS account you will probably have a choice of Linux operating systems, but most come with Centos 5.x 32-bit as the default . For this project I’m recommending Cen tOS 5.x 32-bit. I’m
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