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VPS Vs. Shared Hosting: Which Is Best For You? by Quelle: 7:26am On Sep 21, 2021
If you wonder which of the many options available will make sense to you, you have come to the right place. On the other hand, if you are using a shared hosting account and have not heard of the alternatives, this is definitely for you. Finally, if you have no idea which platform your website runs on, like most business users focused on building the next largest empire, you will benefit from this article.

So let's approach this puzzle piece by piece and learn the best choice of option.

Shared Hosting

As "shared" suggests in the name, it is an environment in which several websites share the same resources: disk space, CPU, RAM, etc. In essence, you can think of shared hosting as a computer with multi-user sites stored on the same hard drive partition.

Advantages of shared hosting

Shared hosting comes with some massive advantages, which makes it take most of the website hosting market.

very affordable

Since it practically does not occupy additional space, resources, or privileges, the provider can offer very economical plans that do the work most of the time. While prices vary from supplier to supplier, it is easy to find offers that offer a host for $ 1 per month. And then, there are always smaller individual players who are happy to undermine even more.

Easy to configure

Shared hosting is easy to configure. If you are going to manage a single website, well, it is already configured, and most likely, you will never need to do anything but work on the front-end (the WordPress administration panel, for example).

And even if one day you need to back up and add FTP users, for example, it is simplified with the use of standardized software such as cPanel, which comes preinstalled in almost all shared hosting environments.

Managed infrastructure
With shared hosting, you work as an advanced user and do not need to worry about what is underneath. System downtime, maintenance, updates: all this is in charge of someone else. If something goes wrong, the support team is just a call away, and, in case the problem is complex, they will follow up with their technical team, which will allow you to sleep peacefully and think about the business.


Cons of shared hosting
However, shared hosting is not without problems. While it is easy to work with it, it is an extremely restrictive environment and has few options.

In addition, if a website is experiencing a great load, it will affect everyone else who shares resources, and you will wonder why your website suddenly slows down for no reason. Safety is another important concern, as is performance.



Virtual Private Server (VPS)

VPS stands for Virtual Private Server. It is a combination of shared and dedicated web hosting. VPS creates multiple virtual partitions on a single physical server; each user account has its own space in the system and remains independent from the other users on that server. Its popularity is attributed to improvements in virtualization technologies that have greatly improved the reliability and performance of VPS.

Install the necessary software; you configure the software to your liking, create databases and websites (virtual hosts), manage users, are in charge of security, worry about updates and downtime, etc.

While this description is enough for shared hosting users to start sweating cold.


Basically, in VPS, we have a real physical machine that uses a technology called virtualization, resulting in "false" software-simulated machines that are independent and isolated environments within themselves.

The destruction of one of these virtual machines does not affect the rest.

Advantages of virtual private servers (VPS)

Once we understand what a VPS is, discovering the advantages is easy.

Better security

A VPS is a closed environment and, therefore, is much safer than shared hosting. If a virus affects a website on a shared host, it can easily "travel" up and through the directory structure, infecting everything else along the way.

Fixing a virus in shared hosting is a nightmare. It is not known how far and deep the virus has spread, and even if a single account cleaning is overlooked, the system will be on its knees again.

A VPS has no such drawbacks; there is no direct disk structure to go through, and a single VPS, if it has no hope, can be destroyed with confidence. In fact, notable hosting providers put additional security measures in place in case of an attack.


Better performance
Since a VPS does not share resources, you can be sure that you get the specifications offered to you. In this case, 2 GB of RAM means 2 GB of RAM, and you can log in to your system and monitor usage. As a result, a VPS works significantly better than a shared hosting account.


You are in charge

In a VPS, you can add or remove software as you wish. If you have configured PHP and want to have another one in Node, all you need to do is install Node and modify some settings. Updating or moving databases, installing free SSL certificate scripts, tightening security, anything is possible.

Cons of a VPS

If you do not regularly update the software on your VPS server, you are exposing your site to security risks. If you break something (a typical scenario is that WordPress add-ons break when updating PHP), well, there is no one to make a support call to!

Fortunately, professional VPS hosting providers like PRV.to offer additional security features and measures to protect your website from attacks and security risks.

PRV.to offers the option to steadily back up your website. However, an outstanding feature that makes them different is the option for Snapshots too. You can have access to Snapshots of your website at any time for €0.1/GB in 30 days.




Who is a VPS better for?
In general, a VPS is suitable for everyone who wants better stability, performance, and security (WordPress configurations with several thousand active users, for example). They are also the favorites of software teams that want to develop customized software with the technologies of their choice or software architects who want to weave complex systems containing several VPS servers.



If you decide to use a VPS service, make sure you look for the best. The best you go for that works for most people is DigitalOcean, an infrastructure that PRV.to runs upon. They provide complete security and anonymity. Getting started is very simple, just an email. Also, you can access your cPanel on a Tor browser; there's absolutely no limit to what you can do there.

Re: VPS Vs. Shared Hosting: Which Is Best For You? by Quelle: 7:28am On Sep 21, 2021
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