Anchor to build a US Point of Presence

Published November 2nd, 2011 by Keiran Holloway

It’s not really any big secret that we’ve gradually been doing more and more work throughout North America. Nor should it really come as any surprise that we’ve been around doing this web hosting thing for quite a while now and are always looking at ways that we can improve our offerings to our valued customers.

On this basis, we’ve recently made the decision to commence a build-out of a US-based facility to offer an alternative point of presence based on the west coast of America.

What was the motivation behind this?

Over the past 2 years we’ve had the absolute privilege and pleasure of building and delivering various complex hosting environments in facilities other than our primary point of presence in Sydney, Australia. There obvious ones include Github, Stocktwits, GroupMe, Huggies, Leadformance and AffinityLive. We’ve had an awful lot of enjoyment building and successfully delivering custom solutions under our
remote management product. That said, however, there has been some challenges that we’ve come across and we are 100% confident that we can significantly improve our product offering by being in control of all aspects of service delivery.

Some of the problems we encountered whilst using other hosting providers included:

- Network outages during business hours whilst routing upgrades were being
completed,
- RAM upgrades and receiving RAM with errors,
- Receiving replacement drives with previous client data still resident on the
drives,
- receiving machines which had been built many months previously, left with default passwords and then subsequently compromised
- rapid deployment systems which actually don’t do either and;
- best of all, intermittent networking problems which couldn’t be solved by the network provider and we could only work around through changing the MAC addresses on the physical devices. Seriously? WHHAA?

For these reasons and various others, we’ve come to the conclusion:

This isn’t good enough for Anchor – We’re building in the US.

In this industry, reputation is everything and when you have high levels of dependence on suppliers then it can be difficult to be entirely in control of your own destiny.

Another factor in the decision making process was that, to my knowledge, there is no other managed hosting provider in the Australian marketplace which is providing, high-quality, premium style managed services using data centers in America. With up to 20% of Australian websites hosted in places other than locally, there seems to be a really unique opportunity to be providing premium support to our Australian customer-base whilst leveraging some of the benefits of having the servers physical located in the states — for example, much larger data bandwidth allocations and closer proximity to the American audience.

Over the new few weeks, we will be taking all our knowledge and skills that we’ve honed the past 10 years running a robust, reliable and premium hosting service. We’re then going to apply it to clean slate in a data centre facility on the other side of the globe.

Sound like a challenge? You betcha!

This is an very exciting time and upon completion we will be able offer high-volume bandwidth services with a US presence both to our existing to our Australian clients as well as extending our reach into the International market in the longer term. During this build up phase I am committed to providing a continous updates as to our detailed processes to give transparency into what goes into building up such an environment.

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VMware announce the new VMware 4 named vSphere

Published February 26th, 2009 by Paul De Audney

VMware have just announced that the new version of VMware ESX will be called vSphere.

Some of the announced features are:

  • 64bit kernel and console operating system (COS)
  • clustered VirtualCenter Servers
  • ESX hosts profile management
  • cross-hosts virtual networking
  • 8-way virtual SMP
  • virtual machines fault tolerance across multiple hosts (the famous Continuous Availability presented last year)
  • VMs and media library
  • alarms on physical hardware faults
  • access control on storage resources
  • configuration change tracking
  • full support for SATA local storage

So it seems VMware are catching up to Xen with some of the features. There will be interesting times ahead in the virtualization space, with the recent release of Citrix XenServer for free.

With an updated kernel and 64bit COS, end users should see more hardware end up on the compatible list which is good news for those who want to use some of the latest and greatest hardware.

Additionally 3rd party vSwitches are going to be supported. Cisco have demoed their Nexus 1000V with vSphere.

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Windows 2008 Hosting Now Available!

Published February 3rd, 2009 by Keiran Holloway

If you’re familiar with the hosting services provided here at Anchor you’re probably aware that we’re big fans of Linux and open source software in general.   That said, it may come as a bit of a shock for you to realise that we’ve actually been doing Windows hosting for quite a number of years now.

It all started with a couple of isolated dedicated servers running Windows back in 2004…Since then we’ve deployed a shared Windows hosting server which is now running hundreds of websites and taken on multi-server Windows hosting environments.

One thing that has been interesting to note whilst making this transition; sure a lot of us here would prefer to be working with Linux systems, but, at the end of the day, the principles behind running robust, reliability and scalable hosting remains quite identical. Whatever the platform.

To re-enforce our commitment to providing a high quality Windows hosting infrastructure we spent the latter part of 2008 hiring staff with a specific skill set surrounding this environment. In addition to this we’ve spent some time looking at the new version of Windows and have published an article in our wiki discussing Windows Server 2008 for Web Hosting

Windows 2008 hosting is now available across all our dedicated server range as well as on all our virtual private servers .

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VPS – Virtual Private Servers now available

Published January 21st, 2009 by Davy Jones

After dabbling with a variety of different virtualisation technologies over the last 2 years we’ve launched a Virtual Private Server (or VPS) offering based on VMware ESX server.

We’ve chosen ESX server for a number of reasons not to mention the ability to perform a sufficient level of monitoring on the host system and have the virtual machines behave in just about every respect the same as a traditional dedicated server would.

A VPS can offer a more affordable step between shared web hosting and dedicated servers but it also creates a more flexible hosting environment. Additional resources can be added to a server with as little effort as a reboot, and they can be added rapidly (hours vs days) in the event that increased performance is needed at short notice.

Learn more about the Anchor VPS service on our website.

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