Yesterday I moved this blog to godaddy.com’s hosting services. They already were my domain name registrar, and their rates were pretty good, so instead of having to go through the hassles of transferring the domain name and such (sure I could have kept the domain name where it is and just redirected it to the new hosting service) i decided to give godaddy.com’s hosting service.
Even though i started the blog on a computer at my home, the noise from the computer was annoying, and the prospect of keeping it On all the time, and its power consumption were key in the decision to get it hosted. Costs me 50$ a year as opposed to just the power bills while it was hosted at home.
Of course it was a no brainer to choose linux based hosting, and i was pleasently surprised by the ease of use of setting up the whole thing.
Once I bought the hosting plan
– I followed the “Getting started with Linux shared hosting” http://help.godaddy.com/article/1361 guide from go daddy to set things up.
– First I setup the hosting account. This gives you the linux userid and the password of your choice to access your hosting account.
– I find this annoying that I cannot get shell access (ssh), i can only get ftp access.
– Next I setup the DNS servers. When you create the hosting account, you get an IP address for the host.Since my domain is hosted by godaddy themselves, i just had to update the dns servers to reflect the current DNS servers for godaddy.
– Then I had to wait for approximately 3 hours (The doc warns you that this could take a while) for all the DNS servers (especially the one used by my ISP) to get updated with the proper name resolution for my domain name to the new hosting server.
– To install and configure the wordpress blog you simply go to the “Manage Account” URl and then choose “Your Applications”, you can choose to install wordpress and it walks you through a wizard to configure the mysql database and other wordpress settings.
– That was all and the blog was up and running.
– Since I had only about 9 posts on my original blog hosted at Home I copied and pasted all of the content to the new blog.
– It is also impressive that you can backup your mysql database using phpmysqladmin (You can store away the backup on your home PC), and you can use ftp to backup your php installation.
All in all I am impressed by the self-service style/error free setup.