KnownHost LLC Puts Up Its 11,111th VPS

KnownHost LLC announced on this Friday that it has managed to bring up its 11,111th VPS (virtual private server). This announcement marks the commitment of the company to dedicated service, technological innovation and value-added service to customers since its establishment in 2005.
The welcoming claim has come up shortly after a major advancement to all of the company’s VPS and Hybrid Servers which includes increasing their memory, disk capacity and making available higher bandwidth to customers. This is the reason why the customers are increasingly finding satisfaction in availing the resources with the same charges as before, a better performance and an ability to extend. The bandwidth of all dedicated servers has also been doubled as claimed by the firm.
“We are excited to achieve this milestone in 2011,” said Joel Neimond, Vice President of Sales at KnownHost LLC. “Our innovative features and commitment to proactively rolling-out upgrades is a formula that delivers real value for our customers year-after-year. Virtual private servers are a growing option for providing reliable, affordable, and scalable hosting for businesses and personal endeavors of all sizes.”
The predictions made by the web hosting industry lend an optimistic forecast for the virtual private server market. Technology writer Glenn Felsihman had this to say on his recent blog post on Ars Technica, a property of Conde Nast Digital,
“While you’ve been able to rent a VPS from various companies for several years, options flowered in 2010. The software has matured, robust services are available, and cost is now at a significant advantage relative to performance for the sort of routine Web and database tasks that the vast majority of websites carry out.”
Additionally advisory firm Gartner anticipated in a report,
“By 2012, 20 percent of businesses will own no IT assets. Several interrelated trends are driving the movement toward decreased IT hardware assets, such as virtualization, cloud-enabled services, and employees running personal desktops and notebook systems on corporate networks.”
