Colocation in NL: Serverius or Worldstream
Hello,
I have a server at a data center in Amsterdam which I need to move to a different colocation provider.
I have narrowed the choices to two candidates, but would like some feedback and any prior experiences to gauge which is the better choice.
Can anyone help me?
Which would you choose for colocation in the NL?
- Which would you choose for colocation in the NL?12 votes
- Serverius16.67%
- Worldstream25.00%
- Someplace else58.33%
Recommended providers: BuyVM - MXroute - LunaNode - Forpsi - IntoVPS
Contact me for all of your Mail-in-a-Box email hosting needs at AnyDomain. I am also a proud reseller of MXroute email.
Tagged:
Comments
You do realize that Serverius and Worldstream datacenters are not in Amsterdam?
What about @clouvider ?
https://inceptionhosting.com
Please do not use the PM system here for Inception Hosting support issues.
You can also take a look at yisp.nl. They offer colocation services out of Iron Mountain AMS1 datacenter.
We have been using them for 2 years with no downtime. We have been with another provider using Severius in the past, several network downtimes during that time. Support was slow too.
You do realize that I didn't say I had to move it TO a datacenter in Amsterdam, but that it presently is in a datacenter in Amsterdam.
Recommended providers: BuyVM - MXroute - LunaNode - Forpsi - IntoVPS
Contact me for all of your Mail-in-a-Box email hosting needs at AnyDomain. I am also a proud reseller of MXroute email.
Their website only shows colocation in London. I need colo in the NL.
Recommended providers: BuyVM - MXroute - LunaNode - Forpsi - IntoVPS
Contact me for all of your Mail-in-a-Box email hosting needs at AnyDomain. I am also a proud reseller of MXroute email.
Serveria banned on LET for running on expired WHMCS, lol:
https://www.lowendtalk.com/discussion/163347/new-2020-dedicated-server-prices-from-19-mo-fully-managed-100-confidential-in-riga-latvia
Just wondering how this point is relevant to this thread -- unless serveria dot com are the same as serverius dot net, but I don't think so
"A single swap file or partition may be up to 128 MB in size. [...] [I]f you need 256 MB of swap, you can create two 128-MB swap partitions." (M. Welsh & L. Kaufman, Running Linux, 2e, 1996, p. 49)
Oh hmm, I didn't catch that, thanks.