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Why not go with Vultr? They have $3.50 plans that you can deploy in Tokyo (they're in the same building as Equinix Tokyo).
I believe RansomIT's tokyo location is @, Equinix (@Oliver)
Perhaps i can be helpful we have both, vps and dedicated servers available.
@estnoc Do you have a test IP and may any offers for me?
@bryce what are you looking for? I might do a end of year special for Asian locations in Tokyo, Hong Kong and Singapore (all in Equinix facilities).
Personally speaking I would never sign up for any offers from @Oliver from Ransom IT no matter how cheap or affordable it could/might be, for the sole reason of:
"Inbound and outbound counted equally. By default if the data limit is reached the VPS is shut down."
But that's just me.
Isn't that basically how any VPS provider especially using Solus is working if they are in a location where bandwidth actually costs money (i.e. not Europe or USA)?
Open to feedback on how else you think I can handle bandwidth management @tcp6 but I suspect typical LET users who might blow through their limits will not appreciate excess bandwidth bills. :-)
@Oliver didn't mean it in a rude way or anything but the last 3 VPS hosts I've been (satisfied) with would only count outbound usage not inbound usage at all, which coming to think of it is pretty standard practice for a server, it's role being to transmit/serve data over the internet.
Besides the whole "We will shut down your VPS" phrase might be hypocritical for some of us, maybe you should just re-word it, re-phrase it differently, who knows.
As for the feedback on how else I would handle it? Here is a suggestion:
Rest assured that once a customer has been "auto upgraded" to the next tier once, they will think about it twice before abusing/exhausting the alloted resources later on.
My two cents.
Edit: You could also artificially cripple/throttle said client from 1Gbps all the way down to say 1Mbps that way the client can still access/backup critical data, which is what OVH does with some of their VPS and cloud solutions where bandwidth is more expensive than Europe/North America, by default the port is configured at 100Mbits then shaped to 10Mbps once the alloted resources have been fully exhausted.
But they will just shut down your VPS. Take your VPS and shut it down so that it is no longer running. What is there to reword?
Are you retarded or just trolling? Honest question.
@bryce You can take a look at our Tokyo, JP VPS here: https://greencloudvps.com/japan-ssd-kvm-vps.php
We are on Equinix TY1 now. You can use the coupon TOKYO to get 40% off recurring with at least quarter payments.
We're in Equinix Tokyo
http://lg.jp.psychz.net/
Not really an assumption I like to make about users activities, and considering traffic flows I see over a large number of sites it's also invalid to assume that because inbound and outbound traffic are actually more or less equal.
Seems more like your problem is that I am upfront and direct about it, not the actual action taking place.
There are alerts like this already, and some users upgrade when they get them. Some reduce their usage, some just let it be suspended and are happy to leave it offline for days or weeks each month consistently (surprisingly). You mention yourself as a customer but you might be very surprised at how people actually consume services like this if you were in the provider shoes. A lot of people straight up ignore those warning emails then still put in a emergency "WHY MY SERVICE DOWN" ticket straight after they consume their cap within 2 weeks of the month.
That would just result in 90% of the auto upgrades being cancelled and invoices generated that would never be paid, especially with the crowd of users this site attracts. I am sure from about a decade in this industry that this approach will not work. Also then it risks a customer using many TB of data while their service remains offline and they have no intention to pay it or upgrade. Who is going to pay for that? Everyone else who uses the service appropriately because it just becomes another business cost that gets passed on to other users.
That's actually a useful option which I am considering as well; but it's not that easy to implement with the management system used now and the other outcome here is you get users who ignore the warnings near the limit, then complain about performance issues when they get throttled. Honestly you can't win with many customer types and the best practice method which has always worked for me has just been to be upfront about the policy. Most people actually appreciate that and that I won't stuff them around with artificial limits or throttles or some other nonsense. If it means you aren't a potential customer I can live with that.
@Oliver Frankly, it feels like we're derailing this poor guy's thread so I'll try to keep it short; regardless of what my thoughts are, at the end of the day it is YOUR business so it is YOUR decision to make how YOU decide to run things.
I merely stated that looking at your site and the proposed metered plans the little * asterisk leading to the bottom caught my attention until I saw the whole "We will shut down your service" phrase, maybe it is just me but I felt the phrasing was a little bit too harsh to my liking, but then again that's just me.
Let's not derail the guy's thread any further with added fluff, I wish you success in your endaevors.
Guys, this is LET. Don't mind the derailing one bit ;-)
@Oliver looking for anything KVM and affordable
LowEndThread.
Decided based on @tcp6 feedback to try something new for the Asia POPs. Outbound only is metered on all of them now; inbound isn't...
OMG HE DID IT!!!111!!!1111~~~
Seriously though; the wording is so much "friendlier" now. It is.
Standard practise is to count both. Provider might get charged for inbound or outbound.
Standard practise is not to shutdown the server, is to send you a bill for what you overuse at the end of the month, without notice, same as your electricity supplier would do. But then it doesn’t work in LET market.
Then pay for it.