Drizzle's back
Dec. 20th, 2004 02:16 pmOkay, well, I have drizzle back. I'm still a very unhappy Elf. Here's the lowdown: completion on the binary newsgroups sucks. I've tried two downloads and both were incomplete. Both were, admittedly foreign stuff, but I'm still annoyed that I couldn't get in and actually get the stuff I'm used to downloading. I don't know if the completion problem is because I'm on top of the stuff and the files aren't here, only the headers, or if because I'm behind in my usual vacuuming of binaries and some have expired or cancelled.
Okay, here's the low-down: I spend about $220 per year, or about $19/mo, for my Drizzle account, and I like them. They really are the good guys, mostly. And you guys have been the greatest help, keeping the account going, which pays for the webserver and ongoing access to my stories. I really appreciate that.
I'm thinking, however, of registering my own domain and going with blarg. They're $15/mo, which is nice, with a $20 start-up fee that includes registration. They don't support CGI, but if I had 50MB of disk space I wouldn't need the kooky CGI thingy I have on Drizzle; most of the things the CGI tools on Drizzle do support the fact that I have to compress my stories to make them fit inside my 10MB limit. I don't need a dial-up account; just reliable webhosting. If there's a better service out there, anyone know of it?
If I can get it down to $12/mo, I can afford Usenet, too, and do most of my "life" stuff, like surfing, email, and remote access, via speakeasy, which is my family's DSL provider.
Not to my kid, you won't: Calvin, 2004.
Okay, here's the low-down: I spend about $220 per year, or about $19/mo, for my Drizzle account, and I like them. They really are the good guys, mostly. And you guys have been the greatest help, keeping the account going, which pays for the webserver and ongoing access to my stories. I really appreciate that.
I'm thinking, however, of registering my own domain and going with blarg. They're $15/mo, which is nice, with a $20 start-up fee that includes registration. They don't support CGI, but if I had 50MB of disk space I wouldn't need the kooky CGI thingy I have on Drizzle; most of the things the CGI tools on Drizzle do support the fact that I have to compress my stories to make them fit inside my 10MB limit. I don't need a dial-up account; just reliable webhosting. If there's a better service out there, anyone know of it?
If I can get it down to $12/mo, I can afford Usenet, too, and do most of my "life" stuff, like surfing, email, and remote access, via speakeasy, which is my family's DSL provider.
Not to my kid, you won't: Calvin, 2004.