My Web host had really been pissing me off lately.
So, this month I built myself a server from the ground up, configured it the way I wanted it, and shipped it off to a friend of mine from high school, who now (among other things) runs an ISP. He's letting me hang the whole box off his pipe for less than the cost of my shared (and nearly crippled) hosting account at the abovementioned Web host. True unlimited bandwidth, as many sites as I can eat (or want to pay for registering the names of), and since it's my box, complete and total control.
I figured it was going to be a horrible challenge to set up... but it was really pretty easy. The hardest part was getting the database copied over, since (thanks to the blogs and the On Notice Generator) it was too big for phpMyAdmin to export all in one shot.
But everything's up and running, and the bounced-spam messages have gone away. I'm waiting for the other shoe to drop...
1. It turns out that means that they won't block your site from serving pages if you exceed a certain bandwidth limit (which they never specified in the contract!), they'll just charge you for it.
2. Arrgh, I've succumbed to office-speak!
As an addendum to yesterday's post, I noticed this morning that the spam filter I installed on my new server actually works. Not only has it cut down the spam to a mere trickle (I was getting 2000+ pieces a day at the old Web host; this morning I had five), but it clearly marks phishing attempts, and alters them so that they won't display unless you explicitly click on a link (this is great, since if an email displays images, it can do so in a fashion that lets the spammer/phisher know they found a valid email address, and you'll never get rid of them).
Why, oh why, didn't I do this sooner? I used to dread opening my mailbox.
The big mall in town is Tippecanoe Mall, named (I presume) after the county it's in. Across the street is a strip mall named "Tyler Too Plaza".