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About Application Service
Providers
Application Service Providers (ASPs) give consumers an
unparalleled level of service and support for externally hosted back-end
applications. They differ from conventional hosting firms since they specialize
in electronic distribution of mission-critical business applications.
Their popularity is currently on the rise since corporate managers worldwide
appreciate the cost savings they generate. Why spend the time and money involved
in purchasing and installing an application you know you'll outgrow in six to 12
months when you can rent it?
Thus, instead of expanding information technology divisions to build and
maintain new business systems, many corporations now entirely outsource their
new application requirements to ASPs. These providers bear the burden of
building, implementing and distributing customized applications, mainly
databases, to internal and external corporate audiences.
ASPs also differ from conventional Web hosting outfits since they develop their
own integrated, proprietary platforms. The professional solutions they provide
are not a hodge-podge of assorted Internet services and protocols. They are a
highly developed, bundled toolkit of services that are backed up by the broadest
bandwidth and customer care systems available.
ASPs are thus the high end stuff of hosting operations. They employ professional
staff to develop state-of-the-art software and networking facilities. Usually
ASPs are publicly-traded or backed with extensive amounts of venture capital.
For these reasons, employing their services is quite expensive. Most ASPs charge
their premier corporate clients US$10,000 minimum for hosting services. The cost
for application development is usually determined on a per diem basis, but is
usually as costly.
ASPs therefore cannot be recommended for the new or novice webmaster since the
cost of use is generally too prohibitive. Application Service Providers are the
most serious of Internet Service Providers, and should only be considered by
very serious webmasters and online businesses who are generating significant
revenue and who operate multiple sites.
ASPs are useful to such webmasters since many specialize in data warehousing. A
data warehouse allows site operators to store text and graphics in database
form. The text and graphics can be extracted and dynamically served as Web
pages. Data warehouse applications are very impressive because they allow you to
produce content on the fly. These applications can flag database information so
that it only extracts certain data for certain Web sites. With such a system,
you could dynamically generate twenty Web sites from one database.
Serving a site on the fly is an especially good option if your content is
extensive. Most site design is based on a series of static web pages. This
situation gets problematic once the webmaster wants to update all the pages. In
this case, the webmaster will have to open each page individually to insert an
addition. This is troublesome if the site is over 100 pages and is inconceivable
if the site is over 10,000 pages in size. With a dynamic database system, only
one addition needs to be made to your Web site template and the change becomes
universal. ASPs are thus quite popular because they entirely automate your
content management.
For this reason, ASPs should be given serious consideration if you're a
successful webmaster looking to migrate your series of sites to a cost-efficient
hosting platform.
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