Hosting companies seem to have the same packages since 2006 - 512 MB RAM, 40 GB disk, etc... What kind of hosting companies are you using these days? Any new and innovative ones out there?
using <a href="http://stormondemand.com/" rel="nofollow">http://stormondemand.com/</a> (liquid web). When we started, a year or so ago, we ran unixbench on a few of their servers, linode and ec2. I don't remember the results, but I remember Storm won across the board (and, in some cases, like disk IO, by huge margins).<p>I had 30 second downtime last week. First time.<p>I like that they offer, ok priced, dedicated machines (though I'm on their "bare-metal" machines for now).<p>The only problem is that they don't innovate. They are where AWS was back when it started. Shared storage...dns...virtual ips..load balancers...queues...(and the list goes on), doesn't exist.<p>If I wasn't such a cheap ass, I'd use Amazon.
An acquaintance of mine actually runs his own hosting company. Feel free to check it out. I don't believe they offer windows solutions, pretty much just Linux based server support, but I could be wrong.<p><a href="http://www.thetemplehost.com/" rel="nofollow">http://www.thetemplehost.com/</a><p>In terms of the hosting providers I've worked with in a professional capacity, they've all had their ups and downs.<p>I couldn't really recommend one over the other, but a lot of people seem keen on Rackspace, and I don't think anyone has ever told me that they enjoyed dealing with 1and1.
I use Dreamhost for my little sites that I don't pay much attention to and AWS for anything bigger. I recently deployed some rails apps on Heroku and have been loving it so I will probably be using that for a while.
Webfaction are the best hosts I've ever used.<p><a href="http://www.webfaction.com/why-webfaction/" rel="nofollow">http://www.webfaction.com/why-webfaction/</a>
Been happily hosting my own personal content on my own hosting company for nearly a decade now. Can't go wrong when you're signing the paycheques and need support.<p>(Owning a hosting company has a few perks, finally!)<p>As for innovators are concerned, Linode is doing good stuff. Can't think of anyone else in the space doing anything remotely interesting quite frankly.
Ruby Ring Tech [<a href="http://rubyringtech.com/" rel="nofollow">http://rubyringtech.com/</a>]. Dirt cheap, and in principle unmetered. (As I have not tried to test this claim, I just get the peace of mind I look for in unmetered plans.) Yes, they are probably <99% in uptime, but then I expected that, as my sites are just learning sandboxes.
I don't know about new or innovative, but a recent post comparing VPS performance ("<a href="http://journal.uggedal.com/vps-performance-comparison/" rel="nofollow">http://journal.uggedal.com/vps-performance-comparison/</a>) concluded that Linode gives the best bang for your buck, at least in the low cost ($20/month) space.
Live servers: LiquidWeb (Physical and virtual, not StormOnDemand but we have 12 big servers with them so they cut us a special deal). Dev/messing about servers: OVH - Dirt cheap, functional, decent hardware, but don't expect support if something goes wrong
I use Webbynode for my personal projects, awesome deployment process, and cheap.
Joyent Cloud is my pick for the bigger apps I run. Pretty similar to AWS, about the same price, way better performance. Just my two cents.
Using modwest for PHP based sites for years. Been stable as a rock. The only knock has been they are slow to add new plugins but probably the reason they are very stable.
in terms of 'different' or 'innovative' the first one that comes to mind is <a href="http://nearlyfreespeech.net" rel="nofollow">http://nearlyfreespeech.net</a>
Been wondering the same. I am stuck on godaddy for several of our company's sites and they are driving me nuts for both operational and political reasons!