Howdy, I use Cpanel currently, and have tried two other products in the past. It creates all of the FTP/www/mysql/mailman/ssh and other essentials in mere seconds. It has about 25-35 different packages that it enables, like phpBB, php-nuke, post-nuke, e-107, mambo, geeklog, OSCommerce carts, you name it. All from a single command line. Hook it up to your favorite domain provider through a vendor relationship, you can automate the entire domain selection/ web hosting/ site creation paradigm. I'm used to having someone up in 10 minutes once they tell me the domain name desired, or they input it into my forms. Last step once you are big enough, is to hook in an online payment API like modernbill or ensim or other, these integrate with Cpanel, Plesk, H-Shpere and the like, and basically look/ feel like what the rest of the net runs when you visit folks like powersurge.net or whomever else of the bazillion hosting firms are out there. Be you small fry or juggernaut, most folks are using either Plesk or Cpanel or H-Sphere type tools to automate their hosted environments. A yearly license is around 400 US (install is included free of charge), but totally worth it when you consider it takes alot of time to sit and edit your zone files in DNS manually, httpd.conf, and mysql command, and FTP server commands. Ick, it makes me shudder to remember back to those days. whew. those darn typos every now and again in a virtualhost directory statement, or worse yet, a missing dot or forgotten serial number increment in a zone file. CentOS is the favorite of Cpanel and H-Shpere vendors these days, and Plesk seems to be a WinTel type firm, -who's coders and support teams are based in yes, Russia. Cpanel is in Virginia I think, and H-sphere/Comodo are canada/germany combo, known as Positive Software, but under constant internal shift for whatever reason. Cpanel has shown me the best support model, when they fail to answer a question I ask for two hours (once in 2 years), they automatically award you a high-priority $65.00 phone incident. They are fast and won't leave you hanging, often just beaming onto the server and fixing rare breakage one might cause performing normal maintenance. CentOS is highly appealing because the user community is deeply informative and quick to respond. This is perhaps one of the many reasons vendors put in one of the top positions for what OS to install their product on, if not *the* top. -be well, and good luck in your hosting! -karlski > Hi > > I am using Centos 4.3 to host various web sites that I maintain. I am > finding that I am getting more and more, and I have thought of setting up > a > hosting server to make things quicker for my self. I have setup webmin > with > virtualmin and it seems to work fine so far. What is everyone else using. > I don't want to invest alot of money, but would like some thing that is > quick and easy to setup a domain and mysql database, ftp etc. Right now I > have to edit httpd, etc etc. > > Thanks > > Mace > _______________________________________________ > CentOS mailing list > CentOS at centos.org > http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos >