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3 posts tagged with "backup and recovery"

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What Are the Main Features of FastPanel?

· 6 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on May 12, 2026

What Are the Main Features of FastPanel?

FastPanel is built for one job: making day-to-day hosting admin less noisy. If you are asking what are the main features of FastPanel for managing web hosting, the short answer is this - it covers the operational basics well, keeps common tasks close at hand, and removes a lot of command-line work without boxing in more technical users.

That matters because most hosting trouble does not start with exotic infrastructure failures. It starts with small, repeated jobs: creating a site, attaching a domain, issuing SSL, checking PHP settings, restoring a backup, adding an email account, or figuring out why one user should not have access to another user’s project. A good panel makes these tasks calm again.

How VPS Catalogues Help You Save on Hosting

· 5 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on April 27, 2026

How VPS Catalogues Help You Save on Hosting

Hosting gets expensive fast when you choose in a rush. A plan that looks cheap on day one can turn into a higher monthly bill once you add backups, monitoring, control panel licensing, or the support you thought was included. That is exactly how VPS catalogues helps you save on hosting - by making it easier to compare what you are actually paying for, not just the starting price.

If you run a business site, client projects, a SaaS app, or an online store, the wrong VPS purchase usually costs more than the sticker price. It costs time, migrations, downtime risk, and extra admin work. A good VPS catalogue helps you avoid that trap by putting plans side by side so you can judge value with a clearer head.

Are Trump Tariffs Killing Small Hosting Providers?

· 5 min read
Customer Care Engineer

Published on April 23, 2026

Are Trump Tariffs Killing Small Hosting Providers?

If you are wondering whether Trump tariffs killing small hosting providers in the usa is just political noise or a real infrastructure problem, the short answer is this: for many smaller hosts, it is a real cost shock. Not always a fatal one, and not evenly across the market, but real enough to squeeze margins, delay upgrades, and make it harder to compete with the giants that can absorb price swings.

That matters to anyone running websites, client projects, SaaS platforms, or online stores. Hosting is not magic floating in the cloud. It still depends on physical servers, networking gear, storage devices, replacement parts, rack equipment, and power systems. When tariffs raise the landed cost of that hardware, somebody pays. Sometimes it is the provider. Sometimes it is the customer. Usually it is both.