Donn
Philosopher
Which of those Digital Ocean plans will be used? And how much does firewalling cost? (I assume this is anti-DDOS, rather than mere iptables.)
Here's GoDaddy's pricing. For $15/month, unlimited everything. (This is shared hosting, but dedicated isn't that much more expensive IIRC.)
Which of those Digital Ocean plans will be used? And how much does firewalling cost? (I assume this is anti-DDOS, rather than mere iptables.)
This forum will go down in history as probably the only internet forum outside the former Soviet Union nations that ever required people's real names to register.
Probably not.
I've know of others, bigger than JREFF, that went beyond that to not accepting registrations with cloud based email addresses like @live or @gmail.
Be quiet!
ouch! I've been migrating *away* from ISP-specific email addresses because they become problematic whenever I want to change ISPs. I now consider my gmail address to be the "real" one.
Thanks for the info icerat. I make that to be about $1080 for a year. Do you think we can have a thread, on the new system, that reveals the details (who, where, what) and the costs on an ongoing basis - to help us decide how much to contribute and how often?
Is the account at Digital Ocean (etc.) going to be in your/TribeTech's name?
Aside: Up to this point, I had thought your own IT company's (in Sweden) servers would be doing the hosting.
Not big, and one of the reasons I discontinued it was the hassle of administration (my time). Keeping things in line, wiping out spammers, answering questions like "how do I post a reply?" -- these became increasingly unrewarding. Admin costs here at JREF, unless mods are paid, isn't a factor in where to host it. My point is even if my board had ballooned by a factor of 1000, the hosting cost (software/hardware) would not have increased much, if at all.How big was the board, and how many hours a month did you spend running it?
And nowhere did I suggest that shared hosting was the answer, only a benchmark.Anyway, we kind of have a bit of knowledge in this area and I and some others have spent a deal of time looking at the requirements of this site. Storage of 500 videos is in fact easier to deal with than a database with nearly 10000000 posts. I can guarantee you that we do not want to put it on GoDaddy shared hosting.
Not big, and one of the reasons I discontinued it was the hassle of administration (my time). Keeping things in line, wiping out spammers, answering questions like "how do I post a reply?" -- these became increasingly unrewarding. Admin costs here at JREF, unless mods are paid, isn't a factor in where to host it. My point is even if my board had ballooned by a factor of 1000, the hosting cost (software/hardware) would not have increased much, if at all.
Even if the quantity of videos I made available had ballooned by a factor of 100, my costs would not have increased significantly. (I moved my video to YouTube as that site's quality became better every year.)
And nowhere did I suggest that shared hosting was the answer, only a benchmark.
Let's do some rough math. 500 videos at 2GB/per. Streaming (that's continuous, or nearly so) data transmission at 1-2Mb/sec, for several videos at once to different viewers, dependent upon how many, of course, but viewers typically watched complete 1 to 2 hour shows each. Contrast that with sending a few K of text data for a post or a page of a thread -- discontinuous -- multiplied by how many users simultaneously posting and/or reading, and the video starts to look like a more of a memory and data hog than a text-based message board.
My point is even if my board had ballooned by a factor of 1000, the hosting cost (software/hardware) would not have increased much, if at all.

I bought no hardware and the only software was vBulletin, about $250 for a perpetual license; a little different if you want updates on a regular basis.
The hosting company has the Internet access, backup and storage, and it is getting cheaper all the time. 1.544 mb/sec -- you gotta be kidding. That's so 1970's. I don't know the size of randi.org's message board database, but I'll bet it pales in comparison to the 500 full-length videos I had stored on my site once. We're not talking about a challenging or expensive site -- this is trivial in traffic, processing and storage.
Here's GoDaddy's pricing. For $15/month, unlimited everything. (This is shared hosting, but dedicated isn't that much more expensive IIRC.
This is not a realistic claim. I'm baffled that you seem to think that everything is free.My point is even if my board had ballooned by a factor of 1000, the hosting cost (software/hardware) would not have increased much, if at all.
YouTube has built-in advertizing. It's only free in the same way that broadcast television or radio is free. It's actually paid for by advertisers.Even if the quantity of videos I made available had ballooned by a factor of 100, my costs would not have increased significantly. (I moved my video to YouTube as that site's quality became better every year.)
Then why did you compare shared hosting to my description of common costs?And nowhere did I suggest that shared hosting was the answer, only a benchmark.
The actual cost of bandwidth is dependent on the excess capacity at the local switching station and the distance between your facility and theirs. If they have lots of extra capacity then you can get a good deal because unused capacity makes them no money. And, if you are physically close then that is good too.Let's do some rough math. 500 videos at 2GB/per. Streaming (that's continuous, or nearly so) data transmission at 1-2Mb/sec, for several videos at once to different viewers, dependent upon how many, of course, but viewers typically watched complete 1 to 2 hour shows each. Contrast that with sending a few K of text data for a post or a page of a thread -- discontinuous -- multiplied by how many users simultaneously posting and/or reading, and the video starts to look like a more of a memory and data hog than a text-based message board.

We're going to kick off with the 8Gb/4core/80Gb SSD hosting with live backup capability, out of NYC. It's going to be a little tight initially when we're running two databases and backups but once the transition is done it should do the job fine. Basic Sucuri firewalling, and at some stage migrating to XenForo with Enhanced Search and Resource Manager.
That should be fine. I run a similar forum (http://metabunk.org) with comparable traffic, but much smaller database on 4GB Linode (now the same price as Digital Ocean equivalents). I use Cloudflare Pro ($5/Month) for firewall and CDN. Xenforo with some tweaks. Handles 2000 active users (as measured by Google Analytics) - which I get very rarely in spikes.
Edit: Analytics "active user" is for a 5 minute window. The default VB active user is 15 minutes. So JREF's peak of 2,222 likely represents <800
Main challenge is the forum DB alone (not file system) is 18GB and we're going to need to run two versions of it while handling the privacy issues, so that's 36GB of our 80GB gone before we even talk about OS, file system (forum images, logs web, etc) and any local DB backups.
We should be fine with off system backups and once we can shutdown the old DB things it should be plenty. If necessary we can bump up the service size for a month or so.
I've been testing CloudFare, had a wiki speed up considerably and a wordpress blog slow down considerably, so still need some tweaking to optimize it.