Intel Xeon Dedicated Servers Enterprise Dedicated Servers


Intel Xeon Dedicated Servers Enterprise Dedicated Servers ,Dell EMC’s Intel Xeon E2176G dedicated server comes with a high-speed processor and provides a very close performance to dual processors. This powerful Dell PowerEdge R240 server is affordable and allows you to run multiple applications at the same time.


This Intel Xeon E2176G dedicated server also provides the ultimate platform to run critical applications on your web servers, database servers, Microsoft SQL Servers, and mail servers. Furthermore, it is also perfect for running virtual environments such as VMware ESXi and Proxmox VE.


Just like any of our dedicated servers, this Dell PowerEdge R240 server includes iDRAC 9 Enterprise. This KVM feature offers simplified server management. Depending on the stock status this dedicated server will be delivered either instantly or within 3 - 5 working days.

One thing that complicates the choice of web hosting is the overwhelming number of options out there! Here’s a quick rundown.

The most affordable hosting plans are shared hosting. They cost less because you share a server with others. You split the cost, but you also split the storage and bandwidth. If another site gets a lot of traffic, yours might suffer.

A dedicated server’s resources are completely available to your website. You get all of the storage and bandwidth, and you may be responsible for the management of the computer as well.

Cloud hosting is a cluster of maintained servers that scale when necessary to give your website even more resources than a dedicated server.

In each case you’re typically offered a choice of plans with different options at different price points. These vary from provider to provider.

So, which type of hosting is best for your site? Answer the following questions to find out.


How Many People Will Visit Your Site Each Month?


File storage is the amount of hard drive space you need for your website. Bandwidth is the amount of data that is viewed or downloaded from your site each month.

Every time a webpage is viewed or accessed, it adds to the amount of bandwidth you use. The text and images of each page need to be downloaded onto each visitor’s computer before they can be displayed in their web browser.

Your bandwidth depends on how many visitors your website receives each month, and how many pages they access each time they visit—in other words, your monthly pageviews. Hopefully this is something that is going to grow over time, so you need to choose a hosting plan that will not only meet your current needs, but take you into the future.

Website traffic can be hard to predict in advance, but we’ll help you come up with an estimate. Once your site is up and running, it’s something you can track with a tool like Google Analytics, but that’s a topic for another tutorial.

How many visitors should you expect? A local business should expect much fewer visitors than a world-wide corporation. A new blog should expect much less traffic than an established one. Here are some ballpark figures:

    New blogs typically receive around 10 visitors a day, who may read a single blogpost then leave. That’s around 300 pageviews a month—around 660 MB of bandwidth.

    As a blog becomes established, traffic may (or may not) increase to hundreds of visitors a day. That’s up to 10,000 pageviews or 20 GB of bandwidth each month.

    A local small business might receive around 30 visitors a day – that’s close to 1,000 visitors a month. If each visitor views three pages, that’s 3,000 pageviews a month, or over 6 GB of bandwidth.

    A large law firm with good branding will get a lot of traffic from Google, and might receive 3,000 visits a day, or 90,000 a month.

    Popular blogs can receive hundreds of thousands of visitors a month. The largest receive tens of millions of monthly visitors.

Back to your website. What conclusions can we make from those ballpark figures?


    Popular hosting companies indicate that their shared hosting plans can cope with tens of thousands of pageviews and hundreds of gigabytes of bandwidth each month. That’s more than enough for most blogs and small business websites.

    As your blog grows in popularity, monitor your bandwidth carefully. As your traffic moves closer to 100,000 visitors a month, plan a migration strategy to a dedicated server. Don’t just monitor monthly averages—take into account peak usage as well.

    Large companies with a well-known brand may receive a large amount of traffic from Google. They would be better served by a dedicated server.

    Large corporate websites and popular blog networks will need a decicated server, cloud hosting or a custom hosting solution.