<linkrel='alternate'type='application/rss+xml'title='Land Chad RSS'href='/rss.xml'>
</head>
<body>
<header><h1>Get a Server</h1></header>
<nav></nav>
<main>
<p>
Once you have a <ahref=domain.html>domain name</a>, you'll need a server to host all your website files on.
In general, a server is just a computer that is constanly broadcasting some services on the internet.
</p>
<p>
Servers connected to the internet can be extremely useful with or without proper websites attached to them.
You can be your own website, email, file-sharing service and much more.
</p>
<h2>Getting a VPS</h2>
<p>
A Virtual Personal Server (VPS) is a very cheap and easy way to get a
web server. Without you having to buy expensive equipment. There are a
lot of online businesses that have massive server farms with great
internet connection and big power bills that allow you to rent a VPS in
that farm for pocket change.
</p>
<p>
A VPS usually costs $5 a month. Sometimes slightly more, sometimes slightly less.
That's a good price for some internet real-estate, but in truth, you can host a huge number of websites and services on a single VPS, so you get a lot more.
I might have a dozen websites, an email server, a chat server and a file-sharing services on one VPS.
</p>
<p>
The VPS provider that I'll be using for this guide is Vultr, since that is what I use.
Vultr provides a free one-month $100 credit to anyone who starts an account through <ahref="https://www.vultr.com/?ref=8384069-6G">this referral link of mine</a>
<footer><ahref="https://landchad.net">LandChad.net</a></br>Because Everyone should be an Internet LandChad.</br><ahref="index.html"><li><imgsrc="pix/chad.gif"alt="chad"></li></a><ahref="rss.xml"><li><imgsrc="pix/rss.svg"alt="RSS"></li></a><ahref="pix/btc.png"><li><imgsrc="pix/btc.svg"alt="BTC"></li></a><ahref="pix/xmr.png"><li><imgsrc="pix/xmr.svg"alt="XMR"></li></a><ahref="https://github.com/lukesmithxyz/landchad"><li><imgsrc="pix/git.svg"alt="Github"></li></a></footer>