Yahoo! now offering "unlimited" web hosting
Loosen those belts and belly up to the bar, because Yahoo! Web Hosting has gone all-you-can-eat. Beginning today, Yahoo! is offering unlimited web hosting for all of its small business customers. What does unlimited mean? In this case:
- Unlimited disk space
- Unlimited data transfer
- Unlimited email storage
- 1,000 email accounts
At $11.95 a month, you've probably spent more at Sizzler's buffet bar. Who can resist popcorn shrimp?
All in all, an interesting development by Yahoo! sure to tighten the web hosting race.












Comments
7
Subscribe to commentsrodentsFeb 6th 2008 4:01PM
Oh my god. That buffet is no more than like... .1 miles away from my house.. What a crappy picture of the sign!
MatthewFeb 6th 2008 6:30PM
When did the word "unlimited" come to mean "limited"? This trend is getting annoying. Read Yahoo's definition of unlimited: "In other words, you can add as much content as you want, but maybe not all at once."
http://smallbusiness.yahoo.com/webhosting/unlimited/
PeterFeb 6th 2008 7:15PM
That doesn't mean your storage space is limited, just the rate at which you can use it.
Besides, if you think you're going to store 4 TB for $12/month and get any reasonable level of performance you're fooling yourself.
99.999% of the users are going to be very happy with this. It's just the people who are trying to "work" the system who will be affected.
MysteriusFeb 7th 2008 1:00AM
Yahoo seems to have a penchant to hype "unlimited"...
I guess it sounds catchier than "indefinite". (Though that isn't quite accurate, either; there do seem to be set limits, but the limits just aren't widely publicized.)
rodentsFeb 6th 2008 7:41PM
and oh, they generally do not have popcorn shrimp at crazy buffet, they do have a Mongolian barbecue that time to time has shrimp.. tofu as well
ChuckFeb 6th 2008 8:44PM
"In other words, you can add as much content as you want, but maybe not all at once."
This sounds like a disclaimer from www.aaa-star-web-hosting-planet-monster.com, written by a high school student.
AlJFeb 10th 2008 9:36PM
I've found that shared hosting from Hostmonster or Hostgator has been sufficient for my needs. Reseller hosting typically costs twice as much as the Yahoo deal but you generally get what you pay for.
http://www.asp-hosting-info.com/asp-web-hosts.html