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Hostigation LEB Offer - KVM/OpenVZ restocked in Los Angeles CA
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Hostigation LEB Offer - KVM/OpenVZ restocked in Los Angeles CA

miTgiBmiTgiB Member
edited November 2011 in Offers

Hostigation.com has been providing hosting, dedicated servers and VPS since 2006 and owns all it's equipment.







SolusVM OpenVZ VPS

OVZ128

10GB Disk

500GB Bandwidth

128MB Memory

1 IPv4 Address



$20 YEARLY Order SC LA



OVZ256

25GB Disk

1024GB Bandwidth

256MB Memory

1 IPv4 Address



$4 Order SC LA



OVZ512

50GB Disk

1024GB Bandwidth

512MB Memory

1 IPv4 Address



$6 Order SC LA







SolusVM KVM VPS

KVM-128

10GB Disk

500GB Bandwidth

128MB Memory

1 IPv4 Address

1 CPU Core



$30 YEARLY Order LA SC



KVM-256

10GB Disk

500GB Bandwidth

256MB Memory

1 IPv4 Address

1 CPU Core



$6 Order LA SC





Available ISO Images

CentOS 5.7 i386 & x86_64

CentOS 6 i386 & x86_64

Debian 5 i386 & amd64

Debian 6 i386 & amd64

FreeBSD 8.2 i386 & amd64

gentoo 20110421 amd64

Vyatta 6.2 i386

Elastix 1.6.0

Elastix 2.0.3

Arch Linux 2010.05 i686

Ubuntu 11.04 server i386

MikroTik 5.4 (License required)

Scientific Linux 6.1 i386 & x86_64

Trixbox 2.8.0.4



Others added upon request



Los Angeles Testfile Test IP: 206.253.164.1

South Carolina Testfile Test IP: 216.189.1.1



Addon cPanel for $11/mo KVM $10/mo OpenVZ

Addon DirectAdmin $5/mo

Addon Softaculous $1.50/mo

Addon WHMCS $12.50/mo

Additional IPv4 Adress $1/mo (With Justification)

Addon IPv6 no charge



OpenVZ nodes support FUSE, nfs, pptp in addition to standards like TUN/TAP and iptables



About our VPS

All VM's are backed up weekly with copies stored on and off-site. We offer cPanel as a semi-managed service, meaning we will take care of your server, you take care of your code.

OpenVZ nodes are dual quad core CPU with raid10 arrays or E3-1230 ECC RAM with raid10 arrays.

KVM nodes are X6 1090T/E3-1270 ECC RAM with raid10 arrays.



Curently in stock:



Location: Los Angeles CA

OpenVZ KVM



Location: Rock Hill SC





OpenVZ/KVM Available, see all of our VPS offerings.

Something you want not offered, drop an email to sales [at] hostigation [dot] com so we can quote your needs.



Acceptable payment options are PayPal, Credit Card via PayPal, AlertPay, Amazon Simple Pay, Google Checkout, Check/Money Order (US Funds drawn on US Bank)

Comments

  • @miTgiB said: $6 YEARLY Order LA SC

    i really thought it's $6/year... LOL

  • KVM-128
    $30

    >

    KVM-256
    $6 YEARLY

    Like the Hostigation site says: "We offer crazy plans for crazy prices!"

  • damnit I borked the edit

    Thanks for catching it guys!

  • Nice to see you have stock again!

  • I signed up for the OVZ256 and so far I am impressed. I am pretty new to the LEB scene but these guys so far seem very professional.

    It is the little things that matter with me:
    +SSL cert for WHM
    +SSL cert for SolusVM and provide link to https version of SoluVM in the welcome email.
    +Fast and responsive SolusVM.
    +Fast and responsive VPS (obviously important!)
    +Fast but also knowledgeable support (opened a ticket with a template question, had a good answer 1 minute later)
    -Debian minimal template has things like Apache, DNS, Samba but a quick run of the LEB debian bootstrap fixed that right up.
    -root password is in clear text in the welcome email, I know this is normal but I don't like it, and yes I know I can just change it which I do but still, since I put the password on the form I should not need it in the email :)

    Obviously a few hours is not enough time to really write a review but I figured I would mention the above.

    Luma

  • @luma said: root password is in clear text in the welcome email, I know this is normal but I don't like it, and yes I know I can just change it which I do but still, since I put the password on the form I should not need it in the email :)

    I never understood why WHCMS (or whatever system it is) does this.

    I've been with Hostigation for around a month now, fantastic experience.

  • cripperzcripperz Member
    edited November 2011

    the password in the email can be actually be removed in the email template settings of the provider, however most provider would have just leave it as default / as it is as it is also to the benefit to the forgetful ones.

  • @luma said: I know this is normal but I don't like it, and yes I know I can just change it which I do but still, since I put the password on the form I should not need it in the email :)

    People like you remember the passwords. But there are many that forget it.

    When you remove passwords from the email, many clients ask
    "I am banned from SolusVM because I put in the wrong password. Please send me my password."

    If you leave the password, clients ask "Why do you leave the password in the email?".

    There is no setting that pleases both kinds of clients :)

    Thanked by 3Asim Mon5t3r tux
  • @kiloserve yeah you can die trying pleasing EVERYONE but yourself. Haha so generally i dont bother to edit it either. =P

  • No starting project... Too bad. I guess I'll wait for next re-stock!

  • My 128mb KVM in SC:

    65536+0 records in
    65536+0 records out
    1073741824 bytes (1.1 GB) copied, 5.76148 seconds, 186 MB/s
    
    4096 bytes from . (ext3 /dev/root): request=1 time=0.2 ms
    4096 bytes from . (ext3 /dev/root): request=2 time=0.8 ms
    4096 bytes from . (ext3 /dev/root): request=3 time=0.4 ms
    4096 bytes from . (ext3 /dev/root): request=4 time=0.4 ms
    4096 bytes from . (ext3 /dev/root): request=5 time=0.6 ms
    4096 bytes from . (ext3 /dev/root): request=6 time=0.5 ms
    4096 bytes from . (ext3 /dev/root): request=7 time=0.8 ms
    4096 bytes from . (ext3 /dev/root): request=8 time=0.6 ms
    4096 bytes from . (ext3 /dev/root): request=9 time=1.5 ms
    4096 bytes from . (ext3 /dev/root): request=10 time=0.4 ms
    
    --- . (ext3 /dev/root) ioping statistics ---
    10 requests completed in 9020.7 ms, 1596 iops, 6.2 mb/s
    min/avg/max/mdev = 0.2/0.6/1.5/0.3 ms
    
    hdparm -tT /dev/vda1
    
    /dev/vda1:
     Timing cached reads:   8900 MB in  2.00 seconds = 4450.71 MB/sec
     Timing buffered disk reads:  310 MB in  3.00 seconds = 103.18 MB/sec
    
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