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GreenGeeks vs Bluehost Review

This is my in-depth technical review and comparison of GreenGeeks and Bluehost web hosting services. It goes somewhat beyond what most reviewers write in terms of the technical details. Techie people will like this.

As you might have read from my last post, I’ve already signed up with Bluehost. But I really want to support a pro-green company. I had considered GreenGeeks previously, but unfortunately, their price was not attractive then. Now, however, with discounts and promo codes, it turns out that their 36-month hosting price costs less than Bluehost. Time to check them out!

So I signed up for an account with GreenGeeks. The nice thing about money back guarantees is that I get to evaluate both services side-by-side, then make up my mind which one to keep and which other one to give up.

GreenGeeks Bluehost
Cost: US$148.20 / 36 months US$178.20 / 36 months
Outbound Bandwidth: 401.2KB/s 200.6KB/s
Inbound Bandwidth: 1283KB/s 2034KB/s
Ping Latency: 248ms 216ms
Hops: 22 14
CPU: Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU L5310 @ 1.60GHz, 8 cores AMD Opteron(tm) Processor 6168 @ 1.9GHz, 24 cores
Memory: 8GB 32GB
Home Disk: 915GB (51GB free) 688GB (636GB free)
Linux Kernel: 2.6.35.7-grsec2 2.6.32-29.1.BHsmp
Apache: 2.2.15 2.2.17
MySQL: 5.0.91 5.1.47
Perl: 5.8.8 5.8.8
PHP: 5.2.13 5.2.17
Ruby: 1.8.7 1.8.7
Python: 2.4.3 2.4.3
Gcc: n/a 4.1.2
Java: n/a gij 1.4.2
OpenSSH: 4.3 5.5
Max User Processes: 20 115
Max Virtual Memory: 200MB 2GB
Max Open Files: 100 1024
UnixBench Score: 564.0 686.9

In summary, in favour for GreenGeeks:

In favour for Bluehost:

I very much like to support green power, so I very much like to go with GreenGeeks because they are pro-green. Unfortunately, there are a couple of things going against GreenGeeks:

There are just two main issues that I’m concerned about Bluehost:

Before summing up this review, I just want to mention a couple of things about “green”. GreenGeeks does not run on green power. Like almost all other web hosting services, the servers and data centres still take power from power grids fed from traditional power plants. There’s nothing green here. Green companies like GreenGeeks buy Renewable Energy Certificates, which pay for purchasing renewable electricity that is generated and delivered back into the power grid. The purchasing of Renewable Energy Certificates offset the non-renewable energy consumed by the company. In the case of GreenGeeks, they buy 300% as much Renewable Energy Certificates as the electricity they actually consumed. Green purists will certainly argue that this does not actually eliminate or reduce the CO2 footprint of the company.

There are true-green web hosting companies. If you are really interested in them, check out www.aiso.net (among others).

So, finally, what is my verdict? I’ve more confidence in Bluehost. I like green, and I like fast download speeds, but ultimately, I’ve more confidence in Bluehost’s reliability, server capacity, and their ability to keep their infrastructure up-to-date.

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