Let's say you have a server, and you don't use the whole thing. You can give away a VPS on it, and then the person getting the vps tells other people how cool you are, how great your service is, etc. driving other people to your paid hosting or to view your ads if you're a post-to-host. You will be paying for the server anyway since you partially use it.
Let's say you have a server, and you don't use the whole thing. You can give away a VPS on it, and then the person getting the vps tells other people how cool you are, how great your service is, etc. driving other people to your paid hosting or to view your ads if you're a post-to-host. You will be paying for the server anyway since you partially use it.
this is wat i said, there is not free lunch.
ppl have to work for it.
if the user did not even try to refer ppl, i doubt the server owner will let that user use the VPS for long.
the reason free VPS companies are starting to show up is the falling prices of technology. As things get smaller, faster, larger, and cheaper, it becomes possible for hosts to offer stuff for less and less. 8 months ago if someone asked for a VPS they were likely to get laughed at, now it is semi-plausable to get one under some circumstances, 8 months from now they may be as common as free resellers.
8 months from now they may be as common as free resellers.
Why is everyone so pessimistic?
Never say never.
The only problem I see with that is the IP addresses. IPv4 is running out fast and VPSs require at least 1 or you have issues. IPv6 would solve this problem if more people had IPv6.
I thin ipv6 is already becoming common in EU