WebHostingHub

WebHostingHub WordPress Hosting


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I thought I would test out a WebHostingHub (Hub) account for myself to see if their web hosting measured up to their claims of being optimized for WordPress.  I’ve installed WordPress on other hosts and right out of the box, with no posts or pages, both the Dashboard and the site itself ran like a dog.  So let’s see how Hub hosting stacks up.

Migrating WordPress to Web Hosting Hub

On you current website, make sure you’ve upgraded to the latest version of WordPress and that your plugins are all up-to-date before you migrate.

Set Up Nameservers – I went to my domain name registrar account at NameCheap and added (NOT changed) the following nameservers:

ns1.webhostinghub.com
ns2.webhostinghub.com

By adding them at this time, it allows enough time for the servers to resolve so you have no downtime when you pull the plug on the old DNS nameservers.

Export the Database- All the posts, pages, tags, categories, etc. are stored in a MySQL database, not in the file system like a regular website, so you have to export the database.  However, do NOT use the WordPress Export tool found in the Dashboard because it will not backup tables created by plugins. 

Yea, you can export the database from myPhpAdmin in your control panel, but the easiest way to get a full export of the WordPress schema AND plugin tables is to install a free plugin called WP-DBManager.  You can get it here from WordPress:  http://wordpress.org/extend/plugins/wp-dbmanager/  Besides, this is one of the most important plugins you can install on your blog to routinely backup your database.

After it’s installed, go to your WordPress Dashboard and you’ll see a new menu entry down at the bottom left called Database. 

  1. Click on the Backup DB link. 
  2. Click the Backup button. 
  3. In the menu on the left, click on Manage Backup DB.
  4. Click the radio button on the right to select the database backup.
  5. Click on the Download button and save it to your hard drive.

Download Themes and Plugins – I FTP’d to the installation of the WordPress blog I wanted to move ( http://DontHaveACreditCard.com ) and downloaded the entire wp-content folder to my hard drive to grab all the themes, plugins, media uploads, backup folders and everything.  The WordPress wp-content folder is sorta the equivalent of the My Documents folder on your PC.   

On the WebHostingHub Hosting Account – I already have my hosting account, so logged into cPanel and created an addon domain for the blog I’m going to transfer, keeping the domain name the same, of course.

Install WordPress – In cPanel, I went to Software/Services and clicked on Fastastico Deluxe and installed WordPress on the addon domain.

Import the Database – In cPanel, I went to Databases and click on phpMyAdmin.  I clicked on the database it created.  It was _wrdp1.  On the right panel, I clicked on the Import link and browsed my computer to the location of the .sql backup file I created.  Then clicked the Go button and waited a few seconds.  The import was successful. 

Copy Themes and Plugins – Then I FTP’d to my WebHostingHub account.  In the public_html folder, I  located the addon domain I created.  From my hard drive, I dragged the entire wp-content folder up to the server, over-writing the existing folder.

The End Result

I had some minor issues, but NONE of them were due to ANY fault of WebHostingHub.

It took between 1 and 2 hours for the IP address to resolve to the WebHostingHub web server. It takes longer to propagate an existing site than a brand new one.  I left the house to get something to eat and it was resolved when I got back.  I have my domain names at NameCheap and they usually resolve in about 20-30 minutes, so a couple of hours was unusual.  Turns out NameCheap was having a brief, temporary issue with their upstream provider.

I had a couple of issues with the WordPress migration, but again, not any fault of the Hub’s.  When you have a lot a plugins installed like I do (26 on that site and that’s on the low side for me), you better anticipate the unexpected.  The more plugins you have, the more that can go wrong.  I’ve migrated a good 40 blogs over the last couple of years and while most of them come quietly, there’s always a few that gave me grief, but like I said, it’s the plugins.

  1. There was a path issue with the WP-DBManager plugin because the configuration settings were brought over in the backup files from the old server.  I had to uninstall the plugin from the Dashboard, Database, Uninstall WP-DBManager menu, then reinstall it.  Then it got the path to the backup folder right, but I had to manually enter the path to mysqldump and the path to mysql which are /usr/bin/mysqldump and /usr/bin/mysql respectively.
  2. Then I ran into some permalink problems.  I use the /%postname%/ format.  When clicking on the post links, I got a page not found errors.  I know the pages and posts were there because they loaded in the Dashboard.  So I repaired them with the WP-DBManager plugin by going to the Dashboard, Database, Repair Database.  BAMM!  All posts and pages loaded fine again.  I always wondered what that repaired.  Now I know.   LOL  I’ll be honest with you, that was a stab in the dark.  Glad it was easy cause I had no idea how’d I’d be able to fix that without doing a lot of research. 

Faster Load Time

Ok, so this was my main topic of interest with the new Hub hosting account – was the load time going to be any faster than on my JustHost reseller account server?  The Hub says their servers are optimized to run WordPress.  Are they?  Drum roll, please…oh HELL yes!  My site always had sort of a tic (slight hang up at a certain spot) to it at JH when loading posts.  Once it was up on my Hub account, I only saw a split second delay on the initial load (to be expected), but no way anything like at JH.  Subsequent pages loads of the same page where so much smoother loading than at JH.  The WordPress Dashboard also runs so much better.  At JH, I was always waiting after I’d save something and so many times it would timeout on me.

And that’s why I recommend WebHostingHub for WordPress hosting.  It really is so much faster than other hosts I’ve used. 

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What is the most reliable web hosting company?

Reliable Web Hosting

Question:

I’m currently using anhosting/midphase to host my WordPress blog and they have been having a lot of server problems in the past few weeks. Last week their service was down a few hours almost everyday. I’m getting sick of their service problem. Anyone know a reliable host service with a lot of space and bandwidth. Price is not an issue, I just need one that is very reliable. Is Bluehost or Dreamhost reliable?

Answer:

I had the same problem with one of my web hosting companies with my WordPress blogs and I got a WebHostingHub account. The reason I got was because WordPress is database intensive. I used to be an Oracle programmer so I know all about database hits. Here’s what they have to say about WordPress.

Web Hosting Hub’s servers are optimally configured to run WordPress. Our servers run suPHP, which allows for a much higher level of security. Our servers also run the latest, most stable versions of MySQL 5 & PHP 5. We configure our servers to utilize PHP Caching and we maximize available server RAM, reducing I/O requests to the server’s hard drives, meaning your WordPress site loads faster!

It was an AMAZING difference over my old host. I currently host with 4 different companies and WebHostingHub out performs them all.

They’ve got a 90-day guarantee. That should be plenty of time to test them out. They’ve also got an excellent rating with the Better Business Bureau. They use cPanel, the best control panel. All plans come with unlimited space and bandwidth. Tech support is awesome. Very knowledgeable and courteous.

 

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iPage for your Content Portal and WordPress Blog

Question:
… can I have a site that is a content portal but also have a blog format on the front page? For instance, iPage has WordPress. Does that mean that I could easily put a blog format on my site? Thanks!

Answer:

iPage is a good choice for web hosting and the SimpleScripts script installer in the iPage control panel will let you easily install both. However, you can’t have both on the front page because they are two different things and they can’t share the same page.  The index.php file from either installation will load that ONE thing. Just pick which one you want. I say go with the CMS and then place a link to the WordPress blog in the menu. You’ll need to install WordPress in another folder on your domain. Logically, it makes sense to install it in a folder called blog.

WebHostingHub is another excellent web host. It’s my preferred WordPress host because their servers are optimized to run WordPress and other database intensive apps like a CMS.

iPage Affordable Web Hosting - Anytime Moneyback Guarantee - Loads of Free Software - Build a Website in 10 Minutes
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Trying to learn about websites in general

Question from :
Even when I use advanced Google techniques, still get advertising and sites focused on one product. Or they recommend to ” use WordPress with an outside host” . I don’t get it, at all. I just want to put up a website that will promote my small business and have a blog. I don’t know where to even start the learning process. I’d be perfectly happy using a template since I know nothing about web design or how to get ” hosted” . I really don’t even understand at all, is there a site, anything?

Answer:

That recommendation to “use WordPress with an outside host” means to buy web hosting and install a WordPress blog. It’s commonly referred to as a self-hosted WordPress blog because it’s not the free version at WordPress.com. (You can’t use that free option for business purposes. They’ll suspended your account.)  Getting a self-hosted blog is sound advice because using WordPress as a foundation for your site is probably one of the easiest and least expensive ways to get your small business online. Here’s what you need to to…

Get Reliable Web Hosting

I’m going to recommend using WebHostingHub for a web hosting company. I have a Hub account and they are VERY reasonably priced. In fact, lower than many of the other popular hosts. Out of all the hosting companies that I’ve used over the years, my WordPress blogs run the best on my Hub account.

Getting a Domain Name

To make this drop dead simple, when you sign up for a web hosting account at WebHostingHub, you’ll get a free domain name. So before you sign up, take a few minutes to think up a good one and be prepared for other options just in case it’s already taken. Your domain name will be free for the life of your hosting account.

Install WordPress

  • After you get the hosting account, login to your cPanel control panel so you can install the WordPress software. Do it like this… In the browser address bar, type in your new domain name followed by a /cpanel like this: http://YourDomainName.com/cpanel  
  • Once you’re logged into cPanel, scroll down to the Software / Services section and click on Fantastico De Luxe
    WebHostingHub Fantastico De Luxe 
  • When Fantastico opens up, click on the WordPress link in the left menu. Then just follow the easy steps to install it. 

Start Blogging

Once WordPress is installed, you can access the WordPress Dashboard to begin setting up your blog. Delete the sample post and page it created. 

Here’s the biggest stumbling block for new WordPress users… the confusion over posts and pages. WordPress pages do not equal website pages. People start creating pages and then wonder why nothing shows up when they go to their site. Pages are for static content like About Us, Contact Us, Terms of Service, Privacy Policy. Posts are for everything else. So if you’re running a sale or need to talk about something new and exciting, you create a post. Then when you go to your website, the most recent posts will appear with the older ones underneath it.

The site you’re on right now is a WordPress blog. Once you get the hang of it, you can install cool plugins for specific tasks.

 

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What is the best unlimited cPanel hosting provider out there?

Question from :
I need to know what the best provider is for unlimited web hosting that has cPanel not another control panel. I am also looking for a low price, but high-quality, fast, etc.

Answer:

I love cpanel.  What kind of things do you plan on using it for?  Blogging, regular websites, forums?  Here are two of the cPanel  web hosting companies that I like best.  

I use WebHostingHub for super fast WordPress hosting.  My blogs run the best on my Hub account.  They have the Fantastico De Luxe script installer.  Low pricing starting at $4.95/month.

I also have a BlueHost account.  Their version of cPanel is a little different.  It still has all the regular cPanel stuff, but with a few more applications geared towards developers.  They use the SimpleScripts script installer.  BH is a tad bit more at $5.95/month.  

One other I’ll mention just for grins and giggles is WebHostingPad.  Super low pricing from $1.99/month.  Softaculous script installer.  I had a couple of WHP accounts back in the day.  They have guaranteed price locking.  Rates don’t increase your price at renewal time.  Unheard of.  They’re they only ones that I know of that do that.

[WebhostingPad]

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Why Use WordPress For Your Website? Cause It’s So Darn Easy!

Using WordPress has become increasingly popular in the last few years.  It’s more than just a web log (blogging) platform.  Entire websites can be built using WordPress.  It’s the perfect communication medium for both individuals and businesses to keep friends, family and customers up-to-date on events, products and services.  Make a controversial blog and vent your personal frustrations about the crazy world we live in.  Or create something helpful with tips and tutorials about your favorite hobbies like computers and electronic gadgets, sewing, gardening, the list is endless.

Easy To Install

The free version at WordPress.com is a good starting point to learn the ropes, but the best way to get the most benefit and functionality out of WordPress is to run the full, self-hosted version.  No matter what your experience level is, you can hit the floor running with easy 1-click WordPress installation found in your web hosting control panel.  

Endless Selection of Themes

No other blogging platform has so much to offer with the availability of themes.  WordPress already has some great free themes available, but you can also install both free and paid themes found elsewhere online.  You can also make your own WordPress themes with a WYSIWYG theme builder called Artisteer.

The Magic of Plugins

Adding enhanced functionality is also easy with the wide selection of plugins available.  From one of those slick slider photo galleries for the home page to sharing buttons for social networking sites.  That’s not even the tip of the iceberg.  Plugins are easy to find with a simple search engine search or by going to the WordPress Plugin Directory.

Old School Websites are Passeé

WordPress leaves little reason to monkey around with hand coding traditional HTML sites or using expensive website builder software.  For years I used website design software and the biggest hassle I had was maintaining continuity.  I’d always end up with stand alone pages.  Every one of them looked different from the other and none of them were linked together.  Building navigation menus was a real pain.

WordPress eliminates all of that because the theme is automatically maintained throughout the site and navigation “just happens by itself” via categories, tags (keywords) and archives and widgets for the most recent posts, pages and comments.  You will never again have orphaned pages.  

You can also take advantage of the new menuing system introduced in WordPress 3.0, you can create hierarchical multi-tiered menus and assign them to your top navigation bar or use them in widgets in the sidebars.  You’ll be able to create menus out of posts, pages, categories, tags and custom links.  

Find the Best Blog Host

Finding the best blog host is a key building block for establishing a successful blog.  

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High PPC Costs and No ROI, What’s the Problem?

Question:

How can “small operator” make money on Internet? Paid listings and PPC = high cost, no ROI. What’s the secret?  Trying to make money on the Internet. During past 2 month campaign, made absolutely “zero” dollars. Only wind up spending more on PPC and Paid Listing campaigns. The “host” or “advertising agency” is making money from me, but I’m receiving nothing from customers in return on investment. My site has Google rating, great navigation, customer friendly, good products, in health fitness weight loss category. However, the only sales in past two months came “accidentally” from a “free-for-all” submission page I did for the “Hoodia Desert Burn” natural appetite suppressant. This was a free campaign that cost no money at all!

Why is ROI so much LESS when I PAY major advertising agencies (even Yahoo Search Marketing) for pay-per-click, or paid sponsor listings?

Where is the money going? Why no return on investment? More importantly, how can someone on a low budget get a fair shot at ROI? If standard web sales conversion rate is .01, then I should be seeing some sales here, but there are none!

Answer:

You may have a good product and ranking, but you also have to give people what they want.  Your ranking means absolutely nothing if you’re ranking on keywords that no one searches on, which is what’s happening in your case.  If you want to see your bank account drain right before your eyes, keep using PPC.  Been there, done that.  The click fraud from the competition was so high, I had to stop.  Because your Hoodia Desert Burn is so micro, micro, micro niched, the only people clicking on your ads are your fellow distributors checking you out.  Instead, concentrate on the organic search results.  Stop trying to sell with ads.

The Google search results for Hoodia Desert Burn are low, Low, LOW, under 200,000.  Yes, people search for hoodia, but desert burn?  No one’s going to know about the product name unless they’ve heard of it.  Look at the SERPs, it’s all distributors trying to rank for that term.

The customer base you’re trying to target has a specific problem.  They want to lose weight.  People are searching for solutions to that problem and that’s exactly how they’re going to search when they sit down at the computer.  They don’t know how to solve it, but they know how to describe the problem they have.  They won’t be searching on Hoodia Desert Burn because they’ve never heard of it.  They’re going to be searching on things like fat loss, does hoodia work, what is hoodia, natural appetite suppressant, etc.  Seach on those words and look at the counts…in the millions.

There is a course I bought several years ago called the Adsense Masters Course.  It was about building websites to profit from Adsense.  It was the absolute BEST step-by-step instructional course I’ve even taken on how to write content.  Even if you have no desire to make money from Adsense (you do not need to put Adsense on the sites you build), it will, without a doubt, teach you how to build websites filled with the content that people are looking for.  The bad news is, John “Xfactor” Robinson no longer sells it.  Even though it’s still packed with tons of good information that works, he’s updated the entire thing and it’s now called the Authority Site Adsense Guide.  Click that link to get to it.  Like I said, you don’t need to do Adsense to learn from it.  Look at that title “Authority Site”.  It will teach you how to become a master of building authority sites.  It doesn’t matter if it’s waterbed mattresses or hoodia diet products.  When you can write compelling content that identifies a problem that people face, make the problem the bad guy, then offer a solution to the problem, you’ve won a paying customer.

Get yourself some decent web hosting to build your websites.  You don’t want to rank for just one keyword phrase.  You’re going to need several and you’re gong to need to build a website for each in order to do that.  Buy the Authority Site Adsense Guide course.  When you get ready to start buying domain names, use NameCheap.  For web hosting I suggest using WebHostingHub.  You’ll be able to host multiple domains on a single account.  Use WordPress to build your sites.  You’ll find WordPress in the cPanel control panel in the Fantastico DeLuxe 1-click software installer.

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New to using a paid web hosting service — how do I set it up?

Question:
So, usually I use webs.com to host sites and I can use it rather well. It’s easy and straight forward. I have a site that runs perfectly on there.

However, my friends and I are attempting to do a big project together. So we decided we should purchase our domain, and we looked into hosting services that had more to offer than webs.com. We paid for one, but have no idea how to set it up. :/

It uses the ‘cpanel’ (control panel), and has the roots folder and public_html. I’ve tried making index.html in there, and added the coding to it. All the necessary css and images are uploaded as well, but it doesnt seem to be working at all. When I go to our main domain (Im not revealing this), it just says
“Hello There!
This website is currently under construction.

If you are the web hosting account owner, please be sure to delete this page after you have uploaded your website. If you’re visiting this site please check back soon!”

How do I make the index/home page actually show up? We’re using webhostinghub.com

Please, only helpful answers. I know I’m pretty retarded ~ You don’t have to point that out. D;

Answer:

Delete the default.html file and you’re good to go.

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What are the costs associated with owning a website?

Question:
I plan on starting a website and I was wondering what costs might be associated in this act. I know about how much the domain name will cost me and I’ve already chosen my host. So, aside from this, are there any online related costs to starting a site? I’ve been hearing about this bandwidth thing, but I’m unsure if that’s for people who host their own sites or for everyone, like people that use hosting sites such as justhost, webhostinghub, and hostgator? All help is appreciated.

Answer:

You can get really cheap domain names at NameCheap.  Then just pick a cheap web hosting plan without a bunch of up-sells and that’s it.  The only up-sell I would recommend is the daily backup & selective recovery service.

Web hosting plans are advertised as a per month price, but paid for in advance.  The typical offerings are 12, 24 and 36 months.  The longer the term, the cheaper the per month price.

Of the 3 you mentioned, JustHost is the cheapest and HostGator the most expensive.  WebHostingHub is right in the middle, but offers the best value, in my opinion.  I had a JH account and I currently have a Hub account.  My Hub account outperforms that old JH account.  WordPress is blazing fast at the Hub.  It’s the best blog host.

Professional Hosting fro Just Host

Save 25% on web hosting with HostGator coupon code: HGFOR25LESS

 

 

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WebHostingHub: Setting Up Some Websites

Question:
I wanted to purchase a subdomain over at http://www.webhostinghub.com/. Since it’s been awhile since I’ve had a page up (When Geocities had number addresses and their size limits) I wanted to know if anyone could answer the following for me.

1. Lets say I get a domain (nintendo.com for example) and someone else I know also wants me to host their page on my domain. Would I have to give them my login and pass, or would I be able to make for them a subdomain with their own login and pass?

2. For most of these blogs and other pages I see up which have “comments” section on every post and a bulletin board, is that something that’s ususally provided by the host, or would I have to find my own host on that as well?

3. Finally I wanted to know with hosting pages, a majority of the time people can find out personal info on the person who owns the domain from something like whois or whatever the name of the website is. I wanted to know is if I do buy a domain page, is there anyway in which I could have this type of information blocked, or would it all become public regardless?

Answer:

I have a WebHostingHub account so I can answer this.  First, they don’t sell subdomains, they sell web hosting accounts.

1)  You can can create a subdomain on your main domain.  Let’s call it “fred”.  It would look like this fred.yourdomain.com.  However, no, it will not have its own username and password.  But, they can buy their own domain name for cheap from a place like NameCheap, point the nameservers to ns1.webhostinghub.com and ns2.webhostinghub.com, then you can create an addon domain with their own username and password.  In fact, you should buy your domain name there, too.  See #3 below.

2)  Those comments you see must be WordPress blogs.  The Hub has the WordPress software all ready to install in the Fantastico software installer in the cPanel control panel.  When you create a post or a page, by default, comments are enabled so when people view a post, they can leave a comment.  You can also turn comments off on a particular post.

3)  Hiding your private information is not on the web hosting account side, but rather at the domain name registrar side.  Again, NameCheap is the perfect place to buy your domain name because they give away free privacy protection with every name.  All you have to do is enable it.  It renews for only $2.88/yr.  So buy your domain name first, then on the WebHostingHub order form, just specify that you’ll be using your own domain name.  DO NOT accept the free domain name offer because you won’t own it.

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