Next Gen Website
Web Design Focus
February 22, 2012 by admin

Keeping Screen Resolution in Mind when Designing a Website

With the web being in constant flux, it is important for website designers to stay current with the most current web design standards. For new blog entry topics, I like to peruse other web design blogs for inspiration, and in turn, stay current with my web design skills. I recently visited a blog that stood out for discussing a topic that would seem to be common knowledge among the web designer community – screen resolution. After some thought however, it is a topic that needs to be discussed. Even though I consciously enter the pixel size of a window when creating a new website design, I never really focus on how it applies to the screen resolution. As a helpful refresher, I have looked into this further and have written a nice, simple, informational blog about this seemingly elementary topic. It turns out, there are some important terms and practices that correspond with these numbers that you might find helpful when devising your future website designs.

There has been a lively debate on the proper resolution designers should use to design a website. A few years ago, it was common to design for a 1024×768 and 800×600 pixel screen. Now, it has become common to design strictly for 1024×768 pixels due to increasing screen size by leading computer manufacturers. Even though many users have increased the size of their monitors, some thought leaders argue that users still keep the browser windows relatively small on their screens to view other task windows simultaneously. Read the rest of this entry »

  •   •   •   •   •
February 22, 2012 by admin

What Is Reseller Web Hosting?

Reseller web hosting is a basic type of web hosting service that gives the user or the customer the option to literally become the web host themselves. In this form of web hosting, the user has the power to use the hard drive space and bandwidth allotted to them for hosting the websites of third parties. As a result, they are users for one party and hosts for another, playing both the roles in two different scenarios. Hence, they are ‘reselling’ that space to a third party. In this system, the reseller purchases the host’s services, hard drive space and bandwidth wholesale, of which a certain portion is allocated to the reseller account.

The reseller can sell this portion to a third party for profit. These reseller accounts vary greatly in size, from having a personal dedicated server to a colocated one. Several resellers provide their clients a service identical to the one they are receiving from the service provider and provide the additional technical support on their own. Interestingly, reselling does not require an extensive knowledge of the technical aspects of hosting and the reseller is only responsible for interfacing with their own customer base.

  •   •   •   •   •