Bandwidth Or Data Transfer - Which is Which?
Contributed By Boris Mordkovich, Director of Operations at MordComm,
Inc. (HostVoice | AdWatcher | PPCUniverse)
Too often web hosts talk about bandwidth and data transfer in the
same breath but truth be known they are different although very closely
related. Bandwidth is how much data can be transferred at a time and
data transfer is how much data is being transferred.
Think of it this way. If bandwidth were a bridge, then the bigger
the bridge is the more vehicles can pass through it. While data transfer
is the number of vehicles allowed on the bridge in say a month. In
essence, data transfer is the consumption of bandwidth.
How It Affects Your Site
The less bandwidth you have, the slower your site takes to load regardless
of the visitor's connection type. If you have more visitors,
some of them will have to wait their turn. The least data transfer
you have, the more often you'll find your site unavailable because
you're reached the maximum allowed until a new month rolls by
or you upgrade your account.
Determining Your Requirements
Usually when a host talks about bandwidth, they are referring to your
transfer. So you need to figure out what is sufficient for your site
to function. You'll need to gather some information; fairly
easy if you already have a site. Most of this information is available
from your traffic history. If you don't have an existing site,
provide an optimistic estimate if you intend to heavily promote the
site. Then get ready for some math.
Find out the daily averages of: -
· Number of visitors / expected number of visitors
· Page size including the graphics of the page
· Page views / expected pages viewed by each visitor
Then, multiply them as follows:
Visitors x Page size x Page views x 30 days = Monthly Website Transfer
You should also throw in a small margin or error there to take into
account email traffic and your own uploads to the server. If you offer
downloads, then you should add the following:
Average/Expected downloads x File Size x 30 days = Monthly Download
Transfer
Unlimited Plans
Bandwidth is very expensive. All hosts are limited by their own allocations.
Thinking back to the bridge. What happens is each visitor to your
site will be given a smaller lane to transfer the data, creating many
tiny lanes therefore "unlimited". The more visitors you
have the smaller each lane will be, which makes each visitor wait
for the page to load.
More often than not there is little choice over your bandwidth as
your host controls this. Some hosts may limit the number of simultaneous
connections so in affect slowing down your site and refusing some
visitors. This is called throttling. If you're concerned about
this, you should ask the host how they control bandwidth usage or
purchase a package with more data transfer. If you use HostVoice.net
(link:http://hostvoice.net), this information is easily obtainable
with one request.
Reducing Transfers
On the other hand, you can reduce your transfer amount by building
simpler, more efficient websites and optimizing your graphics. Refrain
from fancy flash presentations or streaming audio. Use CSS, call JavaScript
externally instead of embedding in every page. Remove unwanted tags,
white space and comments. Limit your META tags to those absolutely
necessary. Having too many keywords is not search engine friendly.
Besides many search engines will only review the first few and ignore
the rest.
Another good idea is to cache your website but you might want to
set an expiry date in the HTTP headers so the browser will refresh
the content after a certain time. Use mod-gzip. It could save you
as much as 40% of your bandwidth. Out of control robots can also suck
down your bandwidth like a black hole. So use robots.txt to keep spiders
in check.
Contributed By Boris Mordkovich, Director of Operations at MordComm,
Inc. (HostVoice | AdWatcher | PPCUniverse)
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