@thecreativeone91 said:
however many years of fast food have told me there is a very strict no refund policy even on messed up orders.
Isn't that what charge backs are for?
@thecreativeone91 said:
however many years of fast food have told me there is a very strict no refund policy even on messed up orders.
Isn't that what charge backs are for?
You should make the coupon code valid for server upgrades as well!
@scottalanmiller -- Not sure that I could do it justice with a review. Install was really easy, which met my needs as a Linux-neophyte. You can view screen shots on their home page.
I'd be happy to (try to ) answer any specific questions that you may have.
@IRJ -- Can't speak to the monthly fee as I've only done the one time fee thus far. I suspect they will honor it going forward, but you would need to confirm that with them.
Just took a quick glance, and Kloxo doesn't support Centos 6 / 7, so it appears to be rather out of date. FWIW, VestaCP does support Centos 6.5 and they are supposed to be working on Centos 7 compatibility.
Another one to look at is VestaCP. I'm currently using it on my C@C box. Love the one-click install!
Sites are still not accessible from Florida.
I can now log into my panel, which shows that both of my boxes are up and running. However, I still can't connect to them.
Ok... so at least this helps me verify that monitor.us still works after injecting CloudFlare into the mix.
Seems like their reverse DNS isn't working out of the box.
@thecreativeone91 said:
The Static IP should stay the same even when re-imaging the instance.
Or at least give you the choice to either keep or change it.
All of my sites are currently very light traffic, so I'd like to add the ZendTo site to this same box.
ZendTo works great for our needs. It allows us to securely transfer larger files back and forth with clients.
@thecreativeone91
Thanks... I'll continue to research and maybe touch base with the developer. I can't imagine that our usage of this product would run afoul of C@C's TOS. We just need a secure means of exchange files with clients.
Dan
Appreciate all of the input. I now have all of my hosted websites running on my C@C box with CloudFlare handling the DNS. Next step is to shut down my account over at MediaTemple.
Then I've got a ZendTo server that I've been hosting internally that I would like to move to the cloud. Anyone know if I can easily transfer this over to my Centos box? It's currently running on a Ubuntu VM.
Wow... that's a crazy deal. Too bad I already bought a Dev3 a few days ago.
Appreciate all the feedback. From a CloudFare POV, what's the best way to handle multiple TLDs (.com, .net, etc) that resolve to the same website? Do I just add one to CF and then add DNS entries for the others?
@StrongBad -- So, I can setup a free account on CloudFlare. What the advantage / disadvantage of using CF versus GoDaddy, who is my registrar? I guess by using CF, I can manage the DNS without concern for the registrar, which could change and the DNS would be unaffected, correct?