Think of your Web site as a guest on the World Wide Web. Where will it stay? How can you make it happy? In Internet parlance, a host is someone (a private enterprise) who fills a room with computer hardware and software, connects it all to the Internet, and allows you to put your files on the hardware so other people can see them over the Internet.
Every Web site needs a host and yours is no exception. Your organization may host your site on its own server. If that’s the case, you will probably receive enough space for one course, maybe more. Your first step in finding a host should be to confirm the policy where you work.
If you plan to create sites for more than one course, or if you think your course will need more space than your own organization provides, you have the option of choosing your own host. There are several perfectly good ones that won’t cost you a dime. Check out Free Web Hosts at http://www.free-webhosts.com/. They provide a list of hosts that offer free web space along with reviews, testimonials and ratings. Buyer beware, but it may be worth a look.
Many free web hosting providers support themselves by placing ads on your web pages. But what’s a few ads, anyway?
Before you conclude that you just can’t bear advertising on your Web site, don’t be too hasty. The Web is full of ads, but that doesn’t stop your customers or students from surfing it, enjoying it, loving it. In fact, they don’t think twice about the ads. Ads are everywhere–so much so that they’ve become invisible. After a few seconds at most, people don’t even notice them, and neither will your course participants. Don’t let a few ads stop you from using a free Web hosting service to build a really simple, really inexpensive, really terrific site.
Still not convinced? Then maybe you’d better spend a little something for Web hosting. There are a number of excellent choices that won’t empty your wallet.
Spend a Little, Lose the Ads
At FutureU, we use two providers for almost all our web hosting (we run about 8 different sites at the moment). Which two? I’m glad you asked. In our estimation SiteGround.Com and GoDaddy.Com run neck-in-neck in the website hosting horse race. Each of these providers has two really important features going for it: 1) They have really good support and 2) they’re cheap.
SiteGround has a really super starter package that includes:
- A FREE Domain Name
- 24,000 MB Web Space
- 24/7 Technical Support
- A really easy to use administration panel (CPanel)
- An automated loader for dozens of open source software packages such as Mambo, Joomla, PHP this and that, and, of course, Moodle
- A free site building tool that makes it easy to create web pages (SiteBuilder)
- Unlimited email accounts (for you and your students)
- FREE Blog Installation
- An E-commerce package if you decide you want to sell something
And all of that is just $9.00 a month with a $20.00 setup fee. If you buy 1 year in advance, the setup fee is waived and the fee is $6.00 a month. If you commit to two years, again, no setup fee, and only $5.00 a month.
We use Siteground for BetaTestLab.Net, our open source testing lab.
Check out SiteGround by visiting www.siteground.com (Caveat: FutureU is a SiteGround affiliate, so if you decide to go with them, we’ll make a little change. So thanks in advance for that.)
GoDaddy has an even cheaper starter package, the “Economy Plan,” that offers only the most basic of features. You get 5 GB of storage space for only $4.00 a month if you buy 2 months in advance. We use GoDaddy for FutureU.Com where we have the most pages to host and that helps us save a few bucks. As with SiteGround, GoDaddy also offers a suite of open source applications you can install to beef up your functionality.
Other Good Options
Let’s start with Bizland. Originally built to support small businesses, Bizland sells hosting plans that start as low as $5.95 a month for a 200 GB, ad-free, space. That’s plenty of space for a course web site.
Hot Tip: Here’s one of the very best deals of all for Web site hosting: Fat Cow Web Hosting has a bargain-basement hosting plan for only $88 a year. That’s one whole year for less than a hundred bucks. It includes free domain registration, unlimited website space, 100 email accounts (so you can give a course-based email address to every participant), and an easy browser-based control panel. You also get a ton of features, including cart wizards for building e-commerce shopping carts where you can sell course materials directly to participants. Plus, you get help in setting up a merchant account for taking credit card payments. Fat Cow also offers phpBB or other forum software for threaded discussions, and all the usual customer support services. All this for $88 a year.
Now that’s a bargain! Not just a fat cow but fat city!
One More Low-Cost, Great Idea: Intranet Software
Like course management software, web-based Intranet software has templates for the materials, calendar, discussions and other features of your course. You don’t have to learn much, if any, HTML either. So far, the two are pretty much the same. But Intranet software is usually a lot simpler to use than its more "comprehensive" course management cousin. Typically the communication tools are just plain better. And, most important of all to any real bargain hunter, the basic features are usually inexpensive.
What’s missing? Well, as you might guess, an Intranet has no electronic gradebook. (See the earlier post about gradebooks for a solution to that). If that’s okay with you, an Intranet software may be the way to go.
Here’s one Intranet possibility:
CommunityZero.Com is one of the best-kept secrets on the Web. For their “consumer” version, they offer a 30-day free trial and then charges only $50 a year for all of these features:
- Publishing (text, links, HTML, etc.)
- Discussion Groups
- News Feeds
- Chat
- Note Boards
- Shared Lists
- Group Calendar
- Opinion Polls
- Image Gallery
- File Sharing
- Instant Messenger
- Automated Member List
- Customizable Appearance
- Automated Invitations with Tracking
Still want more choices for Web hosting? In the next two posts, we’ll cover the two, big, advertising-supported options: Google Groups and Yahoo Groups.
Claude
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