C carlgo macrumors 68000 Original poster Dec 29, 2006 1,806 17 Monterey CA Mar 3, 2008 #1 Somebody mentioned that Apple said his iWeb site got too many hits and would be canceled. What is the limit and how many people have this problem?
Somebody mentioned that Apple said his iWeb site got too many hits and would be canceled. What is the limit and how many people have this problem?
TodVader macrumors 6502a Sep 27, 2005 596 0 Quebec, Canada Mar 3, 2008 #2 iWeb is an application to design websites. I don't see why this would have anything to do with his problem. His hosing is the problem.
iWeb is an application to design websites. I don't see why this would have anything to do with his problem. His hosing is the problem.
M Mitou macrumors regular Jan 25, 2008 208 0 Mar 3, 2008 #3 I know someone with a help site on dotmac that gets about 1200 hits a day and he never had such a notice.
I know someone with a help site on dotmac that gets about 1200 hits a day and he never had such a notice.
angelwatt Moderator emeritus Aug 16, 2005 7,852 9 USA Mar 3, 2008 #4 iWeb sites that Apple is notifying users about is generally running on the .Mac servers from Apple, and based on that we have the following. This site mentions that .Mac hosting provides 100GB of bandwidth. This site says it's only 10GB of bandwidth, which sounds more likely. And someone else on MacRumors says it's 10GB of storage and 100GB of bandwidth. And Apple's web site agrees with the MacRumors statement showing MacRumors users are the greatest
iWeb sites that Apple is notifying users about is generally running on the .Mac servers from Apple, and based on that we have the following. This site mentions that .Mac hosting provides 100GB of bandwidth. This site says it's only 10GB of bandwidth, which sounds more likely. And someone else on MacRumors says it's 10GB of storage and 100GB of bandwidth. And Apple's web site agrees with the MacRumors statement showing MacRumors users are the greatest