The lifetime costs seems quite high in comparison to the monthly cost. It works out cheaper if the VPS is still running after 3 years. Then you are getting a discount.
But, in 3 years, what will the VPS market look like? VPS pricing is dropping considerably year over year, so these will look expensive in 2-3 years anyway, and then there's the lifespan of that particular spec.
Their 2 year pricing looks better, however. The sort of price that's decent value if they last 6 months to a year.
The lifetime 2Gb one looks interesting. But $4 a month gets you what kind of virtualisation? OpenVZ, so you're dealing with contention ratios and overselling. Xen or KVM - then that $4 is a basement price now, but in 3 years?
I'm not sure $140 once-off lifetime cost for a 2Gb is actually worth it - it's risky, considering the lack of visibility and experience with this company. If Linode or DigitalOcean or VooServers did something like this, it would sell out very very quickly.
I guess these are probably useful as a remote shell server, a private git repo, a private documentation server. Running single-user web apps / cloud. Personal use stuff.
I've seen these kind of deals in Cpanel/WHM Reseller packages around (ebay are littered with them). The typical business rationale is to bulk up their customer numbers in preparation for selling out, or to eek out as much cash from an old server on it's last legs . Or the traditional cash-grab and run. These packages have a tendancy to last about 2 -6 months before things start going off the rails.
Where are their data-centres located? Looks like Canada, from some quotes in this thread.
Firstly, they have partnered with a telecom[1], which means they get bandwidth at vastly reduced rates.
Secondly, their prices are roughly 1/3 more than what you'd pay elsewhere for a year of hosting[2]. If they already have paid for infrastructure (which it says they have), selling off underutilized servers quickly like this isn't a bad way to get cash.
Thirdly, I'm sure they have done the math, and can guess how many of these VPSs will be basically unused. If they are already paying to keep the servers running, most of the extra VPSs have negligible influence on their costs.
I wouldn't rely on it for something you expect to be around for ever, but it's probably not an outright scam.
I upvoted this in hopes of seeing it get more comments, and hopefully someone who is known on HN will vouch for them, or at least have a discussion about the company behind this.
They have 10,000 servers at this price... so it sounds like a promotion to get eyeballs for a newly launched service.
And that is why I will pass over them, my business depends on stability of the infrastructure, and these promotional details are not where to look for stability.
On the other hand, this sounds great for personal usage.
How do you use backups on DO? I use salt stack to manage state on all my servers. The only server I care about would be the server that manages salt... but creating a one-time image of the OS and saving all the salt files in a git repo is enough of a backup for me.
As for databases, I have a script that runs and stores them on S3.
Basically the DO backups are for machines that can tolerate 24/hrs data loss-- which to be honest is the vast majority of things. Would I run critical stuff this way? No. My personal websites/blogs and jerkoff clients? Yes. What do you want for $1/month for a backup?
For things I'm a bit more paranoid about I do postgres/mysql backups at regular intervals, and rsync any data directories to another server.
To me the advantage of the backups is this-- if something awful happens, I can restore 99% of my data in, 60 seconds? Then you're only moments away from a working server if you need to shuttle additional data/sql backups over? So be it.
I was an admin for a UC at one time in my life and there I learned that backups are THE most important part of any job. Being a good admin is like being a father I suppose, you do a lot of shit to protect people that will never be needed or noticed. I got myself out of numerous hopeless situations with a good backup strategy which I tested on a regular basis. PRACTICE YOUR RESTORES. The best example of this was my last day at this particular job-- I had an affection for my colleagues and threw a brand new set of AIT tapes into the backup system, and did a full L0 backup of our 7 sun A1000 arrays. In my mind this was the last thing I'd be able to do for my friends.
I swear to jebus the next morning my phone rang-- it was my replacement. He'd rm -rf'd the entire lab's home directories, decades of research worth millions of dollars-- gone. I told him to look to his left and pray to god the light was green and not red. :)
I just bought one. Seems to be legit. A couple of minutes after handing over my $35 I'm ssh'd into a Debian server with the specs that they claim. Even if they go away after a few months it's not a bad deal.
Just signed up, response time from the UK is a bit sluggish. I got my login details by signing into my account at CloudAtCost but not had formal notification details of my hosting credentials by email yet.
It is very legit, we have infrastructure built out for 100,000 servers. We wish to hand out the fist 10,000 one time to reward early adopters. But we intend to always provide a solid service at the best price we can provide.
Cheers,
PS. look up sister companies:
Fibernetics.ca
Fongo.com
Freephoneline.ca - one time $50 for a phone line - 6years old
No information about usage policies. What if we exceed bandwidth? What if I want to build a search engine and scrape the web none stop, forever (I do btw). How many virtual servers are allocated to a real machine?
This is fixed.
Seems like this post caused a pile of rapid signups (thank you !)
Seems PayPal blocked the account for a few minutes...
But its back on.
Thanks
I paid 15 minutes ago and still have nothing; it seems like the 'instant' setup is not quite so instant. The page should probably not advertise "pay and you'll have it in 1 minute".
I work for CloudAtCost.com
The business model was carefully thought out to figure the only way we felt possible to provide a one time fee for a hosted server. You can look us up - check out what we have done with freephoneline.ca - There was a post on RedFlagDeals for 5000 beta accounts in 2007, and thats how we launched.
Freephoneline.ca sold/sells $50 one time phone lines, started in 2007 and still offering the same great service.
(profitably) Actually some of Freephoneline's work has got us where we are today.
One of the philosophies we have is to own and pay for the network, remove any recurring fees by renting other peoples stuff.
This leaves little recurring cost - which translates to savings.
Deliver strong value and savings for Canadian consumers, in doing so - some of them decide to buy other things from us and be life-long customers.
How can a server be free? / or of little one time cost, I will share how it is done.
First buy 100's (or 1000's) of physical servers with piles of CPU cores, mountains of ram, for the best deal possible, and pay cash.
We owe nothing on the gear, it's not leased. They are all on the rack, so if they are sold now - or not sold they cost about the same monthly overhead to us. Specifically we have 40,000 VPS's worth of equipment on the rack (so far).
Next, build a very efficient, and redundant storage infrastructure, use SSDs to make people happy - do not use expensive name brand storage solutions (or you are dead in the water and out of business.)
Use something groovy, say one of the network file systems from the OpenStack project.
Something that scales endlessly.
Then buy or build some of your own data centres, ( www.rackanddata.com + www.data-vault.ca + Fibernetics.ca )
Cost advantage - we don't have to pay $600 /$900 / $1200 per rack.
(actually we don't charge ourselves anything for space, we use some of the empty racks - so its $0/mo )
Then build 30,000 Sq/Ft of solar on your roof so you can produce 4 x the electricity you use - to sell to the grid (and be green).
Then Build a national network with 100's of thousands of Canadians who use and rely on it daily (Fibernetics.ca + Worldline.ca) One of Canada's largest private CLEC's
The idea here is the access to bandwidth at this volume, is really quite in-expensive and sort of already paid for.
Then, we consider a small % of the people find out who we are and buy internet from us for their homes and office, or maybe even buy an office phone system.
(actually we sold $200K worth of phone systems this month from people using our cloud.)
... this good will we built is worth more then just about any regular fee per month.
Summary;
- colocation space, free
- bandwidth, almost free
- server hardware, far less then the $35 - maybe even under $10 ;-)
- power - hedged,
- profit margin on the servers, we invest it, in infrastructure - usually in things that have a +30% return - so in effect we make our own recurring income on the server - to build a better company, which in turn offers better deals.
- goodwill to customers - just like master card, Priceless.
It's so good, we were just going to offer them free... but we knew no one would believe it.
But, in 3 years, what will the VPS market look like? VPS pricing is dropping considerably year over year, so these will look expensive in 2-3 years anyway, and then there's the lifespan of that particular spec.
Their 2 year pricing looks better, however. The sort of price that's decent value if they last 6 months to a year.
The lifetime 2Gb one looks interesting. But $4 a month gets you what kind of virtualisation? OpenVZ, so you're dealing with contention ratios and overselling. Xen or KVM - then that $4 is a basement price now, but in 3 years?
I'm not sure $140 once-off lifetime cost for a 2Gb is actually worth it - it's risky, considering the lack of visibility and experience with this company. If Linode or DigitalOcean or VooServers did something like this, it would sell out very very quickly.
I guess these are probably useful as a remote shell server, a private git repo, a private documentation server. Running single-user web apps / cloud. Personal use stuff.
I've seen these kind of deals in Cpanel/WHM Reseller packages around (ebay are littered with them). The typical business rationale is to bulk up their customer numbers in preparation for selling out, or to eek out as much cash from an old server on it's last legs . Or the traditional cash-grab and run. These packages have a tendancy to last about 2 -6 months before things start going off the rails.
Where are their data-centres located? Looks like Canada, from some quotes in this thread.