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Consider the Critical Importance of Data Storage for Your Social Networking Community
Posted by: Walter Roark on August 19, 2009 at 3:05AM AFT
In performing your due diligence regarding a white label community deployment, keep in mind that your online community’s functionality is only as good as its hosting performance. Have you compared the costs and reliability quotient of in-house hosting versus affordable shared hosting? Which data center Tier rating do you think offers the best value in security and dependability?

Overview of Data Center Ratings

1960s 1979s Tier I Tier IITo succinctly summarize the difference, Tier I represents the most basic type of hosting with a greater risk of downtime for your community. Tier I rated data centers represent the prototype first developed in the 1960s. Tier II complexes offer minor improvements, including servers that are positioned higher off the center’s floor than Tier I, but Tier IIs have also been around since 1970.

Moving from Tier I to Tier IV, one of the biggest differences is built-in redundancy or delivery paths. When Tier I and Tier II centers go down, they’re down. Tier III hosting offers one passive backup delivery path to your active data stream. Tier IV centers provide two full-time, active delivery paths.

For example, ThePort Network’s state-of-the-art Tier IV data center delivers hosting with double-redundancy backup that even includes diesel generators in case of a total power outage.

Quick Comparison of Data Center Tiers

Tier I - Delivery Paths: 1. Raised Floor Ratio to Overall Space: 20%. Raised Floor Height: 12”. Year First Deployed: 1965. Average Annual Downtime: 28.8 hrs. Site data center serversAvailability: 99.671%.

Tier II - Delivery Paths: 1. Raised Floor Ratio to Overall Space: 30%. Raised Floor Height: 18”. Year First Deployed: 1970. Average Annual Downtime: 22 hrs. Site Availability: 99.749%.

Tier III - Delivery Paths: 1 active, 1 passive. Raised Floor Ratio to Overall Space: 80%-90%. Raised Floor Height: 30”-36”. Year First Deployed: 1985. Average Annual Downtime: 1.6 hrs. Site Availability: 99.982%.

Tier IV - Delivery Paths: 2 active, Raised Floor Ratio to Overall Space: 100%. Raised Floor Height: 30”-36”. Year First Deployed: 1995. Average Annual Downtime: .4 hrs. Site Availability: 99.995%.

A Brief Story about a Company Which Decided Not to Go with a Tier IV Data Center


For an example of the real dangers and aftermath of not selecting a Tier IV data Disaster servers downcenter to host your servers, read this story about Rackspace. Rackspace is a global web host which experienced a critical interruption in its sole power display for a number of hours, causing websites for thousands of customers to go down when their servers lost power.

 

Smart, Secure, Affordable Shared Hosting

ThePort Network keeps costs reasonable for its clients by offering shared website hosting in a state-of-the-art, super-redundant Tier IV data center. Together, ThePort and its dozens of clients share the cost of data center operation and vital server maintenance. Everything is included in the cost of the subscription agreement—no additional fees for reliable, high-performance hosting for the life of the contract.

In addition, ThePort’s world-class Tier IV data center features the latest in security, such as bio-key and physical key, along with sophisticated firewalls and vulnerability scanning to protect against viruses, malware, spyware and malicious hacking.

Administration of the servers and center is implemented and maintained by ThePort as part of your contract. Over time, the savings of shared hosting versus internal or dedicated hosting add up.

Questions for Your Software Vendor or SaaS Provider

In your research about data centers and community hosting, try to include a few of these logical questions:


* What is the uptime record over the past 90 days?
* How many backup generators do they have to keep the power running in the event of a power loss?IT dialogue questions web hosting
* Do they provide you with an uninterruptible power supply (UPS)?
* Does the data center have a powerful cooling system that keeps temperatures down to at least 60 or 70 degrees Fahrenheit so that servers and computers are kept cool?
* How sophisticated is the fire prevention system?
* Are system administrators on staff 24x7?
* Will they give you a list of customers you can contact as references?

If you would like to learn more about ThePort’s Tier IV data center and the benefits of secure, shared hosting, click here.

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