Announcing Windows 2012 Hosting in Europe

Takeshi Eto windows 2012 hostingOur UK data center expansion work is finally complete so that we can start to introduce more hosting services there.

We launched Managed TFS 2012 hosting in Europe less than two weeks ago, and today we are extremely happy to announce a service many have been waiting for – Windows 2012 hosting is now available in our UK data center!

Our Windows 2012 hosting platform supports the latest Microsoft Web Stack. This means IIS 8, ASP.NET 4.5, Visual Studio 2012, Visual Studio Express 2012, WebMatrix 2, MVC 4, Entity Framework 5, ASP.NET Web API, Dynamic IP restriction – and we are also supporting WebSockets and node.js. We also increased the memory allocation for our Windows 2012 hosting platform to 300mb!

If you’re an existing web hosting customer at DiscountASP.NET and want to migrate to the latest Windows 2012 environment, we’ve made that migration easier for you too. In the Control Panel Account Information area, we list the Server Type and you will notice an UPGRADE link there. This link will trigger an automated migration for your site. This is a great example of the extra innovative features that we work on and make available for our customers.

A Certificate for Every Admin and a Chicken in Every Pot

Michael PhillipsYears ago, at another hosting company, I was interviewing a systems administrator. His resume was full of Microsoft certifications, so I assumed he would be a good fit for our company, which was a unix/Windows hybrid.

Now I’m not a system administrator, but in those days (circa 1997-98) I did a lot of work on the Windows servers – manually setting up new accounts and database connections, troubleshooting, crying. You couldn’t host more than 250 sites on one box, no matter how powerful it was, and even at that relatively measly density, memory leaks were so common and rampant that the servers had to be rebooted at least once every day. I drove in on weekends, just to reboot dozens of NT servers.

So I did the usual interview with my new friend, then – since I was interviewing him in our “server room” (really a glorified broom closet with an in-wall air conditioner) – I said, “Why don’t you log in to one of the servers and I’ll show you what we’re up to around here.”

But he couldn’t.

Not because he didn’t have proper login credentials, but because he didn’t know how to log in to an NT server from a lock screen.

admin-passwordUp until that point he had been a very persuasive speaker, and I felt as if I may have been in the presence of a great and wonderful mind. I may well have been, but if Einstein couldn’t figure out how to sharpen his pencil, he would have been kind of limited in what he could have accomplished.

All this is to say that you shouldn’t be inappropriately dazzled by a new, upstart host’s claims of employing MICROSOFT CERTIFIED ENGINEERS. It doesn’t mean they know anything about the realities of hosting your site.

Make no mistake, we’re lousy with Microsoft certificates around here. They are spilling out of filing cabinets and getting stuck in the ventilation system. Technically it’s probably a fire hazard, we have so many certificates. The certificates are very important. Everyone who works here is encouraged to gain certification, we even provide a financial incentive for them to do it. We have to have a good deal of the staff certified (and keep those certifications current) to maintain our “Gold Hosting Partner” status.

Maintaining that status has recently become considerably more difficult, and you may notice that certain hosts no longer label themselves Microsoft Gold Hosting Partners, because they can no longer qualify. We still qualify, because we’ve got a lot of very smart people in our midst.

So certification is important and we encourage it. But – just between you and me – in reality, experience is far more important than certificates. Interviewing that certified system administrator who couldn’t log in to a server taught me that. As it happens, we’re lousy with experience around here too. In fact, some of the same people who I worked with in 1997 are here in the office with me every day. Along with a system administration team that has an average of 13 years of web hosting experience per person.

That’s critically important – the “web hosting experience” part. Someone who has 20 years of experience building corporate intranets or managing SQL servers at a hospital isn’t necessarily the person you want running a commercial shared web hosting network. They might be great at what they do, but you’re shopping for web site hosting, not a count of how many Advil are on the shelf at Cedars-Sinai.

So let’s recap:

  • DiscountASP.NET: A ridiculously large (and constantly growing) stack of Microsoft certificates.
  • DiscountASP.NET: Experience running commercial, shared web site hosting that extends all the way back to the Neolithic era of the industry.
  • DiscountASP.NET: A decade-long track record of excellence, awards, kudos, innovation, industry leadership and competitor jealousy.
  • DiscountASP.NET: Brilliant blog authors! (?)

What more could you ask for?

This post is apropos of nothing, as they say, but today I saw a new competitor’s web site that made quite a fuss over their “Microsoft Certified Engineering Team,” but no mention of how long any of those engineers had actually been supporting commercial hosting servers. So here we are, me typing, you reading, and now we’re finished.

Managed TFS 2012 Available in Europe

Takeshi Eto TFS 2012 Hosting We launched Managed Team Foundation Server 2012 hosting in our USA-based data center last year. I’m happy to announce that Managed TFS 2012 Hosting is now available in our European data center.

Our Managed TFS Hosting is a premium TFS service where the you get your own instance of Team Foundation Server on a dedicated VM all to yourself – no sharing. Check out the hosted TFS features here.

For our Managed TFS 2012 service we support both the TFS Basic and TFS Full versions. Managed TFS Basic is the same service as our Shared TFS solution. The TFS Full option includes all the features of TFS Basic and also adds SharePoint and Reporting.

Please contact our Sales Team for a quote, if you are interested a Managed TFS Hosting solution.

And for those concerned about their developers that may be located far from our two data centers, remember that we offer free TFS proxy servers, located in 5 global locations.

Win a pair of tickets to Dallas Day of .NET

Michael PhillipsDodnLogoIf you’re in a last minute quandary, wondering if you should attend the Dallas Day of .NET, we would say, “Yes, go, you are going to have a marvelous time!” You might expect us to say that, as we are a sponsor and a proponent of all things .NET. And most things Dallas.

But to make your decision easier, we’re giving you the chance to score a pair of two day passes for free. That’s a $300 value, and it should help sway you in the direction of Texas.

Check out this list of speakers. You’re not going to find an accumulation of brainpower like that in one place very often. Don’t you want to be there with them?

If the thought of Dallas in February makes you smile, click here for your chance at the win passes. Even if the thought of Dallas in February makes you think, “Boy, I don’t know,” you should still enter. The only way to conquer your fears is to meet them head on. We all know that. And you like barbecue, right? Everyone likes barbecue. Well they’re pretty good at it down there. Don’t take my word for it.

The contest is open for entries until Thursday, January 31st. You can enter every day, and when you share the contest on Facebook you get three additional entries every time one of your friends enters. How can you beat that? That’s a rhetorical question. Obviously it can’t be beat.

CES 2013: Less Relevant, But Still a Lot of Fun

Stefanus Hadiimage001 I was excited to attend this year’s Consumer Electronics Show (CES) for the first time and while I came back with mixed feelings, I will go again if I can. The conference was definitely over-capacity with enthusiastic attendees. It’s been a long time since I’ve been to a conference that was so packed.

But many technology watchers, analysts, and big companies ignored this year’s CES. Microsoft, one of the longest-running CES anchor sponsors with high profile Keynote duties, decided to pull the plug in 2013 and opt for sponsoring one small part of the conference. CEO Steve Ballmer did end up participating with a cameo appearance during a Qualcomm CEO Keynote, but the only Microsoft banner that I saw in the exhibit hall was at the Innovation showcase.

This is one of the reasons why many have asserted that CES is not relevant anymore. In the past, CES always served as the venue to launch new products but in recent times large companies are electing to host their own conferences to launch products and control their message.

So you may ask why people go to this “non-relevant” conference -– after all, you can stream the keynotes online, many large companies ignore the conference and launch their products with their own shows, and other companies announce their products prior to CES.

CES may have lost some of its prior status, but I think all of these trends are allowing more of the smaller startups and companies outside of the well-known computer/software industry to have the potential to shine as people are eager to check out what’s going on with these other companies. And of course meeting people and actually touching the devices you may have previously only heard about or seen online is also a main driver.

image002For me, while I had already heard about the Panasonic Ultra High Definition Television (4K OLED) with a 56 inch screen, it was sure fun seeing it in person.

I already know that many household products are becoming Internet-enabled, but it was still fun to see the LG and Samsung refrigerator that can spit out recipes. It was interesting and unexpected to see the hardware store Lowes getting into the action with Internet-enabled security products.

Some of the most interesting products were related to health care.  There were wrist watch/band monitoring systems that communicated with the Cloud and allowed the consumer to access their health data through apps on their mobile phones.

Being my first time at CES, I didn’t know what to expect. I left with mixed feelings because I didn’t have the sense of excitement that I wanted to feel — like when Steve Jobs makes product launch announcements — but I still had a great time seeing and touching all the devices and some surprising innovations from “non-Google-Microsoft-Apple” companies. I left feeling inspired.

It was great seeing first-hand how different “non-phone/tablet/laptop” devices are increasingly becoming Internet-enabled and that the communication and data has to live someplace — and that would be at a host. So to see that the hosting industry is playing a increasingly bigger role in people’s lives makes it even more exciting to be in the hosting business.

#InternetFreedomDay

Michael PhillipsHard to believe it’s been a year since you and I defeated the proposed SOPA and PIPA legislation.

We wrote about the issue quite a bit in articles like Why you should care about the SOPA and PIPA legislation (part 1) (Part 2), An open letter to the web hosting industry and Were you duped by big technology companies into opposing SOPA and PIPA? (that one really got my goat, as the kids say) and we told you about becoming a Charter Member of the Internet Infrastructure Coalition.

We were all over the movement because it struck at the heart of our business. We love freedom – make no mistake – but we love our jobs too, and when something threatens them, we don’t sit back and hope that bad things won’t happen.

But thanks to you and millions of outraged people like you, we were able to get congress to step back from the brink and rethink their strategy. If they only acted out of fear for their wallets, so be it, the end result was the same.

Thomas Jefferson (or John Philpot Curran, apparently) said that the price of freedom is eternal vigilance, and that’s no joke. I don’t think any of us are naive enough to believe that big media has given up their efforts to get Congress to pass laws that will give them even more power than they already have to file a lawsuit against you because you saw or heard something without paying them a fee. Or because they think you may have.

I’m an artist and a writer who believes in and relies on copyright protection. But what the big media conglomerates want is not protection, it’s power. They think they can buy it, and why not — they’ve always been able to in the past. So it’s up to us to keep pushing back until they learn that they’re going to have to set aside the strong-arm tactics and figure out how to sell their products to a modern culture.

They’re going to have to change. But they won’t, and of course the politicians won’t, without being forced to do so.

So keep up the good work, and as Kris Kristofferson said, “Don’t let the bastards get you down.”