Archive for the ‘Development’ Category
Powweb finally gets back to me
It’s taken three days and in the end I had to send an e-mail to their sales department saying that I wanted to cancel the hosting account to get any action. Now they’re saying that they are expediting the work on it.
It’s still not working though and, supposedly, they’ve now been working on it for around half a day.
I’m persisting with the cancellation as I’m wondering how long it will take them to get around to getting the account fully operational (I’m assuming that I’ll find more things that they’ve not set up properly).
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.American hassles on the powweb hosting
I thought that I’d run with powweb as our main hosting platform in America on the basis that Brooke uses it and she always seems to know what she’s doing computer-wise.
Not a good move as it turned out.
Uploading the databases and HTML was very easy and much faster than expected. But nothing worked… it took them a day to find out that they’d not installed the PHP software for me.
Then things seemed to work. In fact, everything worked fine ’til I tried some pages that use encoded characters (for the French e-acute etc.) and none of them worked. That was two days ago and they’ve still not worked out how to fix the problem so I’m now in the process of cancelling the account with them.
Why the different experience? Well, Brooke has been with them for years and up to April 2006 they were one of the best places around so any teething troubles that she may have had were sorted out under the old regime. In 2006 they were taken over by Endurance and from then on the support had rapidly become worse. That’s not reflected (yet) in most of the review sites as they generally take account of all reviews so, of course, most of them predate the 2006 takeover.
Anyway, I’m off to try another place over there now.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Thinking of setting up a US company
I find myself in the unusual (for me) position of thinking about setting up a company in America.
How did that come about? Well, some back of the envelope calculations indicate that there could be a lot of money to be made were some of my websites hosted in America and in some circumstances it looks like doing that might produce a tax liability for me over there so to ringfence that, it looks like the simplest long term solution would be to run the sites via a US based company. If that situation comes to pass (I’ll not know if it’s likely to for several months) it seems likely that I’d end up running all the income through said US company purely to simplify matters tax-wise for myself.
Anyway, because of all that, I’ve started looking into how one might go about setting up the company and it looks like it’s a whole lot simpler than it is setting up a UK company. The place to form it seems to be Delaware in that if you don’t make any income in that state then you’ve only $60/year tax to pay them which is dead handy for me as the websites are likely to be hosted in Texas. Setting up the company costs around $200 all-in and after that it’s under $100/year running costs although I imagine that I’d be needing an American accountant at some point if things really took off (can’t see it somehow).
One side-effect of doing that would be that I could even move to America if the income were high enough in that I could obviously employ myself.
Still, all that’s dependent on the website working really well in America and, of course, it might not.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.American Adventure
Some years ago I moved all my websites from a US hosting service over to a UK one to take advantage of the search engine boost that you get when your sites are hosted in the country where your target audience are searching from.
Ironically, now I find myself moving some of those same websites back to America in order to pick up traffic from the US itself. That’s happened because the sites are now much larger and much more global in scope so there should be a certain advantage in hosting in the US to reach the US audience.
Now, the question is: will the jump in traffic be anything like the 30 fold jump that I picked up on moving the sites over to the UK in the past? Well, I should know in a few weeks for sure but, so far, the traffic appears to be higher than it was when the site that I’ve just moved over was living in the UK.
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.Trying out American hosting
Several years ago I made the move from US based hosting to UK based hosting because of the extra traffic that you tend to get when your site is hosted in the same location as your main customer base.
That particular move worked really well in that I ended up with around 30x (yes, thirty times) the traffic that I’d had on the original American hosting service. That’s with no changes in the website apart from where it was hosted.
Ironically, now I’m looking to move some sites in the opposite direction as they now have more of a global audience than the collection of sites from a few years ago did.
Now, the big question I’m wondering about is whether I’ll get a 30x jump in traffic in going the other direction?
Copyright © 2004-2014 by Foreign Perspectives. All rights reserved.