Archive for Business

Coming to Europe!

We are announcing today that Serverminds will soon open a new office in Europe to better serve the growing amount of clients we receive from the European countries.

Besides opening a branch office in Europe, Serverminds will also expand it’s Cloud Infrastructure, Dedicated and Colocation services to Datacenters in The Netherlands and Germany.

Keep an eye on our blog for more information regarding this milestone in the history of Serverminds!

Serverminds is back!

Now after 5 months of technical preparations we have released the first version of the new ServerMinds website, the content is still basic and minimalistic but we will be adding new pages and services over the next weeks.

It has been a long road to follow, building up our technical infrastructures and back-ends from scratch in order to allow our clients to experience a feeling of being hosted with a thrustworthy partner.
Our re-newed slogan “Giving you the competitive edge” and our tagline “Succeed Online” express the new directions we have taken.

Over the next weeks we will introduce services that will truly give you the competitive edge to succeed online, a whole new Virtual Private Datacenter setup allowing you to add and drop Virtual Servers on the fly no longer having to worry about the capacity of your Server Processor, RAM or Harddrive you just drag-and-drop the server you require into your Virtual Private Datacenter and you can start using it right that minute!

If you run an online webshop or e-commerce environment our services tailored and designed for E-Commerce systems will excite you like never before, enjoy our pre-configured Cloud Hosted E-Commerce systems and never worry about missing an order or client again!

If you are a reseller of Dedicated Solutions our new and improved Reseller Series line of servers will give you the competitive edge back and enable you to sell your services again like you are used to, without having to worry your supplier is going to compete with you for clients

Serverminds is Fully Native IPv6 ready

As of August 1st 2009 the Hosting Services provided by SharedLayer are supporting the IPv6 protocol fully native. Along with the standard assignment of IPv4 addresses clients can now request their IPv6 range of addresses for their services.

Those who are unsure on what IPv6 offers will find some information in the introduction below.

IPv6 Protocol
The IPv6 Protocol, earlier designated IPng (next generation) is a more permanent solution of the shortage problems with the IPv4 addresses.
The introduction of IPv6 into the Hosting Networks is a lengthy process, SharedLayer is one of the first companies that made a step in this direction.

The IPv6 address is 128 bit long where the IPv4 address = 32 bits, the IPv4 provides an addressing capability of approximately 4 billion addresses.
In the early stages of the internet this seemed sufficient, not anticipating that the internet would grow explosively and worldwide.

IPv6 is provides an addressing capability of 2128 ≈ 3×1038 addresses, in a more understandable perspective this would mean that there is an addressing capability to assign an unique address to each device connected to the internet.
Another way of putting things into perspective is assuming that with IPv6 each person on the earth could own a IP range of the size of the current internet.

While these numbers are impressive it is not the intent of the IPv6 address space to assure geographical saturation with usable addresses, the packet format of IPv6 allows a better and systematic (hierarchical) allocation of addresses and efficient aggregration of routes.

Addressing Length

The length of the IPv6 address is the most impressive and also the most important change when changing from IPv4 to IPv6.
An IPv6 Address is usually written as eight groups of 4 hexadecimal digits, seperated by a colon.

Example:
2001:0db8:85a3:0000:0000:8a2e:0370:7334 

To shorten the writing of the address several simplifications to the address notation are allowed within the IPv6 address.
Any leading zero’s in a group may be ommited.

Example:
2001:db8:85a3:0:0:8a2e:370:7334

Besides ommiting leading zero’s in a group there’s another efficient method where one or any number of consecutive zero’s may be replaced by two colons (::)

Example:
2001:db8:85a3::8a2e:370:7334
 >

This method may only be used once in an address, because multiple occurences would lead to address ambiguity.

Accordingly, the localhost (loopback) address, fully written as 0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0000:0001, may be reduced to ::1 and the undetermined IPv6 address (zero value), i.e., all bits are zero, is simply ::

IPv6 Address Types
IPv6 addresses are classified into three types (RFC 4291)

Individual (unicast)
identifying single network interface. Assigned by a method resembling rather the CIDR than A, B and C Classes

Group (multicast)
identify a group of network interfaces, to whose members the data should be delivered to. Group addressed datagram is recommended for all group members, therefore it replaces the broadcast from IPv4. It’s support in IPv6 is mandatory!

Selective (anycast)
identifies a group of network interfaces, where one IP address can be assigned to several nodes simultaneously, but only the “closest” one should react (respond). 

Address Space Distribution

Prefix
::/128 Unspecified
::1/128 Loopback (Unicast Localhost)
ff00::/7 Unique Local Address
ff00::/8 Group (Multicast)
fe80::/10 individual local line

Debian 5.0 (Lenny) released

On February 14th 2009 Debian released a new stable version, version 5.0 also known as “Lenny” is now available.

Our clients now have the ability to select Debian “Lenny” as Operating System on their servers.