Sunday, April 4, 2010

Today is final presentation for our project. During our presentation the laptop suddenly shut down by itself..fuhh..what an uneasy situation. :( however everything end in a good way. After all the presentations, we have to submit a full reports of our project on 5th April via e-learning. We also need to give our soft copy in CD to Dr J.
Finally..just waiting for the exam. Hope can get a good score..
For all my classmate..i'm wishing u all the best. Good Luck everyone..
Hope will see u next semester (in another subject of course)..
BYE..!!

Choosing a Commercial Web Host

Below are some criteria when choosing commercial web host. For more info, u can go to http://www.thesitewizard.com/archive/findhost.shtml

  • Reliability and speed of access
  • Data Transfer (Traffic/Bandwidth)
  • Disk space
  • Technical support
  • FTP, PHP, Perl, SSI, .htaccess, telnet, SSH, MySQL, crontabs
  • SSL (secure server), Shopping Cart
  • Email, Autoresponders, POP3, Mail Forwarding
  • Control Panel
  • Multiple Domain Hosting and Subdomains
  • Server
  • Price
  • Monthly/Quarterly/Annual Payment Plans
  • Resellers?
  • International

Choosing a Free Web Host

1. Advertising

Most free web hosts impose advertising on your website. This is done to cover the costs of providing your site the free web space and associated services. Some hosts require you to place a banner on your pages; others display a window that pops up every time a page on your site loads, while still others impose an advertising frame on your site. Whichever method is used, check that you're comfortable with the method.

Note that free web hosts without forced advertisements aren't necessarily good news. Without a viable means to recover the costs of running their server, many of them close with alarming frequency.

2. Amount of web space

Does it have enough space for your needs? If you envisage that you will expand your site eventually, you might want to cater for future expansion. Most sites use less than 5MB of web space. Indeed, at one time, one of my other web sites, thefreecountry.com, used less than 5MB of space although it had about 150 pages on the site. Your needs will vary, depending on how many pictures your pages use, whether you need sound files, video clips, etc.

3. FTP access

(In case you're wondering: What is FTP?)

Some free hosting providers only allow you to design your page with their online builder. While this is useful for beginners, do you have the option to expand later when you become experienced and their online page builder does not have the facility you need? FTP access, or at the very least, the ability to upload your pages by email or browser, is needed. Personally, I feel FTP access is mandatory, except for the most trivial site.

4. File type and size limitations

Watch out for these. Some free hosts impose a maximum size on each of the files you upload (including one with a low of 200KB). Other sites restrict the file types you can upload to HTML and GIF/JPG files. If your needs are different, eg, if you want to distribute your own programs on your pages, you will have to look elsewhere.

5. Reliability and speed of access

This is extremely important. A site that is frequently down will lose a lot of visitors. If someone finds your site on the search engine, and he tries to access it but find that it is down, he'll simply go down the list to find another site. Slow access is also very frustrating for visitors (and for you too, when you upload your site). How do you know if a host is reliable or fast? If you can't get feedback from anyone, one way is to try it out yourself over a period of time, both during peak as well as non-peak hours. After all, it is free, so you can always experiment with it.

6. Perl and PHP

(In case you're wondering: What is PHP and Perl?)

This is not particularly crucial nowadays for a free web host, since there are so manyfree script hosting services available that provide counters, search engines, forms,polls, mailing lists, etc, without requiring you to dabble with Perl or PHP scripts.

However if you really want to do it yourself, with the minimum of advertising banners from these free providers, you will need either PHP or Perl access. Note that it is not enough to know they provide PHP or Perl access: you need to know the kind of environment your scripts run under: is it so restrictive that they are of no earthly use? For PHP scripts, does your web host allow you to use the mail() function? For Perl scripts, do you have access to sendmail or its workalike?

7. Bandwidth allotment

Nowadays, many free web hosts impose a limit on the amount of traffic your website can use per day and per month. This means that if the pages (and graphic images) on your site is loaded by visitors beyond a certain number of times per day (or per month), the web host will disable your web site (or perhaps send you a bill). In general, 100MB traffic per month is too little for anything other than your personal home page and 1-3GB traffic per month is usually adequate for a simple site just starting out. Your mileage, however, will vary.

We supposed to present our final project today but due to some problem we all agreed to postpone it to Monday next week. So just be prepared!!

Today we talk about Free Web Hosting.

A web hosting service is a type of Internet hosting service that allows individuals and organizations to make their own website accessible via the World Wide Web. Web hosts are companies that provide space on a server they own or lease for use by their clients as well as providing Internet connectivity, typically in a data center. Web hosts can also provide data center space and connectivity to the Internet for servers they do not own to be located in their data center, called collocation.

Free web hosting service: offered by different companies with limited services, sometimes supported by advertisements, and often limited when compared to pay hosting.

Shared web hosting service: one's website is placed on the same server as many other sites, ranging from a few to hundreds or thousands. Typically, all domains may share a common pool of server resources, such as RAM and the CPU. The features available with this type of service can be quite extensive. A shared website may be hosted with a reseller.

Reseller web hosting: allows clients to become web hosts themselves. Resellers could function, for individual domains, under any combination of these listed types of hosting, depending on who they are affiliated with as a provider. Resellers' accounts may vary tremendously in size: they may have their own virtual dedicated server to a collocated server. Many resellers provide a nearly identical service to their provider's shared hosting plan and provide the technical support themselves.

Ops..class got cancel again. Good thing though. We have more time doing our website..hehe


FIVE CRITERIA are:

Accuracy of Web Documents

  • Who wrote the page and can you contact him or her?
  • What is the purpose of the document and why was it produced?
  • Is this person qualified to write this document?

Authority of Web Documents

  • Who published the document and is it separate from the "Webmaster?"
  • Check the domain of the document, what institution publishes this document?
  • Does the publisher list his or her qualifications?

Objectivity of Web Documents

  • What goals/objectives does this page meet?
  • How detailed is the information?
  • What opinions (if any) are expressed by the author?

Currency of Web Documents

  • When was it produced?
  • When was it updated'
  • How up-to-date are the links (if any)?

Coverage of the Web Documents

  • Are the links (if any) evaluated and do they complement the documents' theme?
  • Is it all images or a balance of text and images?
  • Is the information presented cited correctly?

Putting it all together

  • Accuracy. If your page lists the author and institution that published the page and provides a way of contacting him/her and . . .
  • Authority. If your page lists the author credentials and its domain is preferred (.edu, .gov, .org, or .net), and, . .
  • Objectivity. If your page provides accurate information with limited advertising and it is objective in presenting the information, and . . .
  • Currency. If your page is current and updated regularly (as stated on the page) and the links (if any) are also up-to-date, and . . .
  • Coverage. If you can view the information properly--not limited to fees, browser technology, or software requirement, then . . .

Why do we need to do web testing and evaluation?

Testing and evaluating your own site can help us spot problems and make appropriate changes. It helps to have somebody else evaluate and test the site for you, but you can probably gain some benefit even if you go through the procedure yourself.

Web Testing – focus more on technical

Web Evaluation – Focus more on non technical part, outcome.

Read more about why website evaluation is important and how it will give you return on your investment. There are two kinds of performance measures related to websites, and they are sometimes confused:


  • Website effectiveness: First, you should measure effectiveness in terms of visitors’ experiences on your website. For example, you can measure how many people visit your site, how satisfied they are, and how well they’re able to accomplish what they want. The jargon for this kind of measurement is “Web metrics” or “Web analytics.” Read more about different types of website evaluation.
  • Achievement of agency mission: Second, you should measure the impact of your website on achievement of your agency’s mission. These performance measures address the extent to which your agency is achieving its mission specifically because of its website. Read more about tying evaluation to agency mission.

It is important to identify and fix any problems before publishing to avoid any embarrassment or credibility loss with your potential users. Without testing you run the risk of appearing testing, unprofessional, and you may even alienate potential users if problems are not discovered until the site is live on the web.


;;