It’s
no secret that there has been an on-going war over customers in the web
hosting industry for many years. Together with the technical evolution
of computer hardware, this fierce competition has drastically increased
what you get for your money when you buy a web hosting account.
The people behind Uptrends originally came from the web hosting
industry, so we tend to keep an eye on the development in that industry
out of sheer curiosity (aside from the fact that we have a lot of web
hosting companies as customers, so we deal with them on a daily basis).
We know that the changes in what the hosting industry offers have been
enormous, but we wanted to find out exactly how much things have
changed.
Reaching 10 years into the past
Thanks to the good old Wayback Machine,
we were able to look at archived web pages of a few web hosting
companies that were active 10 years ago. We selected Dreamhost,
Liquidweb and Hostway, for no other reason than them being well-known
today and that they were around 10 years ago.
We looked at three things. The price of a regular, consumer-oriented
shared web hosting account, and how much storage space and data
transfer (traffic) was included in that account. And boy have things
changed.
Content has changed, not prices
Price for a normal shared hosting account
| Web host |
Package price per month (USD) 1998 |
Package price per month (USD) 2008 |
| Hostway.com |
13.95 |
13.95 |
| Liquidweb.com |
24.95 |
14.95 |
| Dreamhost.com |
9.95 |
9.95 |
| Average |
16.28 |
12.95 |
You can say that the term “price war” that has been thrown around isn’t
necessarily what has actually been happening. The war has been one of
features, adding increasing amounts of storage and data transfer.
Prices haven’t changed all that much (if at all), but you get a lot
more bang for your buck these days. And with a lot, we mean A LOT, as
you will see if you continue reading.
Increase in storage space
Storage space offered by a normal shared hosting account
| Web host |
Storage in MB 1998 |
Storage in MB 2008 |
Increase in storage (times) |
| Hostway.com |
200 |
12,000 |
60 |
| Liquidweb.com |
250 |
1,000 |
4 |
| Dreamhost.com |
10 |
500,000 |
50,000 |
| Average |
153 |
171,000 |
1,115 |
The hosting industry has clearly benefitted from the huge advances in
hard drive technology (and of course much cheaper hard drives in
general).
The largest increase (of these three) comes from Dreamhost, who have
increased the storage they offer by 50,000 times. (Yes, that’s right.
Fifty thousand times.)
Increase in data transfer (traffic)
Data transfer (traffic) offered by a normal shared hosting account
| Web host |
Traffic in GB 1998 |
Traffic in GB 2008 |
Increase in traffic |
| Hostway.com |
6 |
250 |
41.67 |
| Liquidweb.com |
N/A (”unlimited”) |
60 |
N/A |
| Dreamhost.com |
2 |
5,000 |
2,500 |
| Average |
4 |
1,770 |
442.5 |
(Numbers are per month.)
Data transfer numbers have increased, but not as much as storage.
Network capacity is apparently not keeping up with storage space.
Here again it’s Dreamhost, out of these three, that have increased
the most. 2,500 times more traffic per month. (Their offer in 1998
actually said “unlimited”, but a look at their terms of service
revealed this to mean 2GB per month.)
Bang per buck
How much you get for a dollar
| Web host |
MB per dollar (storage) 1998 |
MB per dollar (storage) 2008 |
GB per dollar (traffic) 1998 |
GB per dollar (traffic) 2008 |
| Hostway.com |
14.34 |
860.22 |
0.43 |
17.92 |
| Liquidweb.com |
10.02 |
66.89 |
N/A |
4.01 |
| Dreamhost.com |
1.01 |
50,251.26 |
0.20 |
502.51 |
| Average |
9.42 |
13,204.63 |
0.25 |
136.68 |
This table really shows how much more you get for your money compared to ten years ago.
*cough* Overselling? *cough*
There has been a lot of discussion about overselling (i.e. offering
more than you can actually deliver to everyone), and some of these
numbers do indicate this to some extent, at least those of Dreamhost.
It’s hard to look at these numbers without thinking that, so that is
why we mention it.
To be fair, they have gone on the record in their blog
explaining the practice and their reasoning behind it (similar to
mobile carriers not having capacity to handle everyone calling at
once). Anyway, this article was never meant to be about overselling. It
was meant to be about now vs then.
Web hosting 10 years from now?
We only looked at storage and data transfer here, but there are of
course also other factors and features that add more value to web
hosting packages these days compared to 10 years ago.
We are not going to speculate what hosting will look like 10 years
from now, though. Judging by what has happened in the last 10 years, we
don’t even dare to guess that far ahead into the future. But please
feel free to do so in the comments!
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