Most of these are probably spammer replies. But I'll reply anyway...
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Originally Posted by Boardredi
There's no need to be a programming genius or a code expert. As a matter of fact, you don't need to know any of that.
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That's not really accurate. You need some basic fundamental knowledge about how sites work from the back-end, even if you're not the ones coding it. There is a learning curve. You can't be a completely clueless, yet have a successful site (unless you pay somebody else to do it for you).
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Originally Posted by JessyJ
What exactly are you looking for?
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That's really the only accurate thing you stated.
Hosting needs must be paired with a hosting service. There's too many aspects to hosting to just randomly grab a tiny shared account, or unmanaged VPS, or whatever else. The need (site, app) determines the tool (hosting type, company used, etc).
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The only question is whether you have access to the server's location.
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In the era of CDN and CloudFlare, this doesn't really matter as it once did. Some, but not entirely, and less so than at any time in web history.
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If you have a server that you do not host,
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Huh?
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do not have access to (for example, a friend's computer),
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That would be really dumb to do.
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or it is a large enterprise and you need physical access, then this is one thing.
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I guess? But the modern shift is to cloud for enterprise, like AWS, not in-housing bare metal services in a stuffy hot closet in the back office.
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If you choose a special bare metal server, then try to change the operator/source of communication.
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Huh?
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For example, I was lucky to find a normal host only with the 3rd attempt, so that there were no problems with it. But I have a small project, so I'm not particularly sad about it)
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Three attempts? Yikes!