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Well, that really depends on your website needs, its levels of traffic, the DB platform you want to use and the amount of users hitting it simultaneously. There isn’t really a correct answer for this one, but there are some common guidelines that can help in shaping this DB requirement. In terms of databases to be used in websites, the three options that are usually offered with web hosting plans are: Microsoft Access, MySQL and SQL Server. MS Access and MySql are always included by default. SQL Server is a premium solid database engine ready for enterprise use and traditionally it had been seen more as an upgrade than as a standard feature.

But due to increased competitiveness now more and more providers are including SQL Server databases as a standard feature in their shared hosting plans. If you are running a sales-oriented website with shopping cart features or a complete database-driven website or a WordPress blog or some sort of online data repository such as a directory or social website, then your user base is definitely the defining variable when sizing your database resources.

A SQL database can contain thousands of tables, stored procedures and functions and indexing can be configured so that queries can execute faster than ever. Even the most complex web applications typically only require a single DB. But, then other factors can come into play such as replication, mirroring and data warehousing. If you are planning to use SQL replication so that your data is safely transported to a secondary server for reporting or disaster recovery purposes or SQL mirroring so that you have redundancy in case the main database server fails, then you definitely need more SQL databases (2 at the very least).

In reality, while configurations such as the one described above can be found in most enterprises today, database services offered with shared hosting plans do not require (most of the time) this amount of sophistication. So, our best answer to the question posed in this article is that you, most probably, just need one SQL database in your hosting plan.

Database-driven websites are a very interesting concept because most of the content they offered is of dynamic nature. It changes on its own, so the website proprietor doesn’t really need to worry about most of the updating tasks. But this also poses some challenges due to the fact that your website or web application has to be designed using a layered model in order to protect the underlying data repository. The components of this model require some level of knowledge about data access technologies and from time to time will need some sort of maintenance in order to keep the application running normally.

A very good hosting provider that includes SQL Server Databases as a standard feature in its Windows shared hosting packages is IXWebHosting. Make sure you select a Windows based package in order to be able to use SQL server as your database engine.

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Do not do business with 1and1.  They are the worst excuse for a domain registrar I have ever dealt with, and I have accounts with most of the major providers.

I did not go looking for a 1and1 account.  In November, I bought a bulk lot of domain names from a 1and1 client, so I had to set up an account to accept the domains.

Now, normally a domain name transfer can be accomplished in hours if there you know what you are doing.  I will admit that this involved 270+ domains, so I would expect some extra time.  I think a week would not be unreasonable.

It took 1and1 over a month.  During that month, neither the seller nor I had any access to any of the domains.  We could not mange them in any way.  They were effectively nonexistent.  1and1 never made any attempt to update us on the status unless we sent a specific request, and every time they just said they were having difficulties and were working on it.

Then, before the domains ever got transferred, they billed me for domains that expired during their transfer difficulties.  Keep in mind that I bought 270+ domains.  I had no intention of keeping all of them.  Some I am developing, some I am selling, and others are worth neither, so I am just letting them expire.

I had no ability to cancel the ones I did not want, because they were not transferred to me yet!

I have sent dozens of requests for resolution of this to everyone I can find at 1and1.  I have been lied to, put off, given the runaround, and basically treated like scum;  all because they cannot keep their own business straight.

This is just a short blurb for clients who check this website.  I posted the whole sordid affair at http://RippedOffConsumers.org. Pages and pages of proof that 1and1 is incompetent and dishonest.

AVOID 1AND1 LIKE THE PLAGUE!

 

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