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Copyright 2003Jupitermedia
  Most Popular Tutorials

• Microsoft Vista Home Networking Setup and Options
The most daunting part of upgrading to Windows Vista may be trying to figure out where in the layers of menus the networking and file-sharing options are hidden.

• Do It Yourself: Roll Your Own Network Cables
It may not be something you do everyday, but having the supplies and know-how to whip up a network cable on the spot can be very handy.

• Tips for Securing Your Home Router
Seemingly minor and easily overlooked settings can still have profound security implications. Here are some steps you can take to make sure your wired or wireless home router — and by extension, your network — is as secure as possible.

  Most Popular Reviews

• Microsoft Windows Home Server
If you have a home network, you'll welcome the easy file sharing, remote access and the image-based backup features of Windows Home Server.

• Iomega StorCenter Network Hard Drive
Iomega's fourth generation StorCenter Network Hard Drive brings many of the features found in higher-end storage devices down to an attractive price.

• MikroTik's The Dude
This free tool delivers many of the same capabilities that you'd find in pricey network monitoring tools. As long as you don't mind tinkering, The Dude is a decent network utility that should be worth the download.


Introduction
What to look for
ISP Hosting  
Free Webhosting
Paid Webhosting
Do It Yourself
Changing Webhosts
Links
 
Dynamic DNS

This option really isn't recommended for someone who is trying to establish a business presence on the Web, because free hosting services usually don't allow you to have your own domain name. Although you can work around this disadvantage with a dynamic DNS service, "free" hosting usually has some other undesirable "feature",  like having to display a banner ad for their service on each page, or getting an annoying "popup" window. 

Not exactly the way to establish a professional web presence!

But if you want to explore this option, you might check the sites mentioned in this PC World article (from the June 1999 issue).  The chart below is taken from that article.
Service What's hot What's not Bottom line
FortuneCity 20MB of Web space; relatively unobtrusive ads. Spartan site-building tools; cryptic URLs. Lost in space.
GeoCities
(now part of Yahoo!)
Excellent tools for everyone from newbies to HTML pros. Puts ads and the GeoCities logo on your site; cumbersome URLs. Lots to offer--and lots of ads.
Theglobe.com 12MB of Web space is a meg more than most provide. Crude site-building features; truly irritating pop-up ads. Better bet: Homestead, GeoCities, or Tripod.
BEST
Homestead
Simple, powerful, and no ads; easy URLs; password protected. Fewer tools than some others for tweaking HTML by hand. Easy-to-use, potent, fun--our favorite by far.
Tripod Tons of tools and tutorials for novices and experts alike. Irksome ads; requires you to update your site monthly. Not bad, but not Homestead either.
Xoom.com
(now part of NBCi)
Plenty of Webspace; nice chat room feature. Places a strip of ads on all your pages; so-so site-building tools. Once ad-free site is now one of most commercial.

Copyright © 1999 PC World Communications. All Rights Reserved.


Other Ideas for Free Webhosting Providers

  • Check first with your ISP to see what's included in their web page service.  The space is usually 5 to 10MB, traffic is limited, and you don't get extra email mailboxes.

  • Aid4 Earth looks like their mission is finding and indexing all sorts of free (or almost free) web services.

  Pay for it!

 








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