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What Is Bandwidth? How Much Do You Need For Your
Website?
Bandwidth is a term that has several different
meanings depending on the context. When talking
about bandwidth in terms of Web Hosting it refers
to the amount of data that transfers into and out
of your web hosting account. Incoming data can include
requests for web pages, email, FTP requests, and
FTP uploads, while outgoing data includes file transfers,
web pages, and email. Each hosting account is allocated
a certain amount of bandwidth per month. Common
figures for bandwidth range from 3 GB for small
personal sites up to 200 GB for large business systems.
How Much Bandwidth Do You Need?
How much bandwidth do you need? This depends on
the amount of traffic your website receives as well
as the content. Web pages made up of text and a
few pictures are very small in size but if you get
thousands of visitors each day you may need a lot
of bandwidth. On the other hand website content
consisting of downloadable files such as software,
music or video is much larger in size, so even if
your traffic is fairly low you may need extra bandwidth.
How To Calculate The Amount Of Bandwidth You Will Need
The best way to calculate the amount of bandwidth
you need is to calculate the size of your downloadable
content and multiply by the number of visitors you
receive each month. Add to that the number of emails
sent and received and other content such as FTP
uploads. The figure you come up with should be pretty
accurate because it is unlikely that every visitor
to your site is going to download every file or
view every page. This will give you a bit of margin
to play with.
As your web site grows and as you receive more
traffic you may have to increase your bandwidth
allotment accordingly. It is better to plan ahead
and arrange with your web host for a larger hosting
package rather than wait until you go over your
limit. Check with your host to see what their policy
is in regards to exceeding your bandwidth. Some
will allow you to go over by a certain amount while
others will shut down your site and demand that
you upgrade your account before resuming service.
It is always best to keep track of how much bandwidth
you are using and anticipate when you need to upgrade.
If you feel that you have sufficient bandwidth
and would prefer not to upgrade you may be able
to 'throttle' traffic if you are approaching your
monthly limit. Some hosts offer this service as
a way to limit incoming requests or to exclude requests
once a certain number has been reached.
There are several throttling options. You can limit
the number of incoming requests by specifying an
idle time between requests. This causes incoming
requests to be delayed by a specified amount of
time if too many are arriving at once. Other options
are to impose a limit on data transfer within a
certain time period or to limit the number of requests
for a certain file. The speed of transfers can also
be capped at a certain level. Throttling may not
be a good idea if you depend on web traffic for
your business. If your pages are slow to load or
if users can't access files they are looking for
they may give up and move on to another site. If
you have a lot of free content, though, throttling
can be useful for keeping your hosting budget within
a certain amount.
About the Author
Liz Roberts is a loan consultant
with NewHorizon
Finance and has been running an online finance
company since 1989. Bad Credit? Join our mailing
list for tips on building and repairing
your credit yourself, without hiring a credit
repair service. Click here for a list of bad
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