bow Posted December 24, 2009 Share Posted December 24, 2009 (edited) Is "google sites" any good, if you want your own website ? You get what you pay for, and in this case you don't pay anything. But on rare occations you do get good stuff for free. What about google sites ? Edited December 24, 2009 by bow Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
monty Posted December 24, 2009 Share Posted December 24, 2009 Depends what you want it for. If it's just for personal use, to play a little with it, it might be fun! Commercially, forget about it! Go for proper paid hosting! If you really want to learn the ropes, for peanuts you can get fully comprehensive hosting, including databases, ftp, scripts, e-mails, the whole works for 12 US$/year (400 Baht!). Still wouldn't use that for commercial use due to reliability/uptime/customer support issues, but a great start nevertheless! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
huma79 Posted December 27, 2009 Share Posted December 27, 2009 Google sites can be fine commercially if you're just looking for a simple presence on the web, with no frills. Actually, they are beginning to integrate some interesting features into google sites now. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
torrenova Posted December 28, 2009 Share Posted December 28, 2009 Depends what you want it for.If it's just for personal use, to play a little with it, it might be fun! Commercially, forget about it! Go for proper paid hosting! If you really want to learn the ropes, for peanuts you can get fully comprehensive hosting, including databases, ftp, scripts, e-mails, the whole works for 12 US$/year (400 Baht!). Still wouldn't use that for commercial use due to reliability/uptime/customer support issues, but a great start nevertheless! Can you chuck some details my way please. I just need a one page job with a click through email to a Gmail account which will be something like [email protected] Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sid1967 Posted December 29, 2009 Share Posted December 29, 2009 you can definetly do that with google sites Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Totster Posted December 29, 2009 Share Posted December 29, 2009 Depends what you want it for.If it's just for personal use, to play a little with it, it might be fun! Commercially, forget about it! Go for proper paid hosting! If you really want to learn the ropes, for peanuts you can get fully comprehensive hosting, including databases, ftp, scripts, e-mails, the whole works for 12 US$/year (400 Baht!). Still wouldn't use that for commercial use due to reliability/uptime/customer support issues, but a great start nevertheless! Can you chuck some details my way please. I just need a one page job with a click through email to a Gmail account which will be something like [email protected] And don't forget, you can use Google Apps for any email address, which means you can have your email delivered into the same web interface as you are used to with gmail. It's free for up to 50 accounts I believe. Look for the Standard edition. Totster Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MrHammer Posted December 29, 2009 Share Posted December 29, 2009 I'd stay away from anything with google if you can. They are collecting personal data on a never before seen level. How do you think they serve you those contextual ads in your gmail? They read trough your mails. Same with all the other apps by Google. You'd be amazed at their ability to know what you are doing at anytime. Better with a personal mail on a website. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
mattcodes Posted December 30, 2009 Share Posted December 30, 2009 (edited) Better with a personal mail on a website. Hmm.. yeah often on a shared server supporting 500+ other websites, email etc... with no redundancy (server goes = hours/days downtime until recover backup - if they even exist) running several services that could become vunerable at anytime (FTP,SSH, POP3, IMAP4, Apache/HTTP)... Don't believe the negative hype around. Google doesnt read your email like you put it, their software scans for keywords and chooses suitable contextual advertising when it plucks the email from their storage, if you say it like that even Horde/Neomail any webmail "reads your email", how does it get from the hard drive, though the operating systems, through the application layer php etc.. it is read from the disk.. Relevant ads or not? I'd choose relevant.. Google mail rocks. And the commercial edition $50 per user per year (min 1 user) includes 25gb, no ads and an SLA You'd be amazed at their ability to know what you are doing at anytime. I'm going for a beer... i bet when i get in and log onto google tonight and i'll see ads for hangover cures.. hmmm You'd be amazed at how people jump on the bandwagon of speculation.. Edited December 30, 2009 by mattcodes Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Crushdepth Posted December 30, 2009 Share Posted December 30, 2009 Better with a personal mail on a website. Not sure about that. Google's security (and reliability) is light years ahead of what most people can do running their own mail server. Gmail also gives you encrypted connections to the mail server and (optionally) webmail etc, so there is less chance your mail getting read by third parties (from your end, anyway). Google has a hel_l of a lot to lose if they get caught abusing customers data, especially since their customers now include a lot of government organisations. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bow Posted January 7, 2010 Author Share Posted January 7, 2010 I have opened an google sites site. One good thing about googles sites, from my personal point of view, is that it instantly gets you out there, on the net/web. You can walk into an internet cafe, anywhere in the world, write my very, very long address - and there I am, on the f..... net. (I think!!!) For me, this fact, works as an inducement to start building a site, instead of just talking about doing it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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