Just a note to say that I’ve just registered http://www.teamtownend.co.uk so you can now access this site at either the .com or .co.uk. Email also reaches me at either suffix now.

Repeatedly setting DNS servers is boring.

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Hello!

I'm Edward Townend. I'm Graphic and Web Designer, Photographer and (improving) Web Developer based in Barnsley, South Yorkshire, UK. I run the design agency Townend Creative LimitedThis is my blog, and I'll be keeping it updated with articles of interest to the graphic design and photography community, as well as any updates that happen in my World.

I’m Listening To:

I thought I might as well at the very least reserve my name on Twitter, so today I went ahead and signed up. You can find me at www.twitter.com/edwardtownend. I think we’ll have a weekly digest of tweets on here to summarise what’s been going on (if I actually remember to tweet.)

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Yesterday my hosting account got suspended due to another domain using excess bandwidth. This meant visitors to my site were redirected to an error page, and I couldn’t log into the control panel or even access the site via SSH or FTP. Normally this would be a disaster, as you’re locked out of your own site at the mercy of customer support. Not for me however!

I had configured my domain’s DNS servers to use freedns.afraid.org, which in turn pointed to the ukhost4u account. Sure, this adds an extra layer of requests to the loading time, but when the hosting goes down, all I had to do was import the latest database backup on my home server, flip the DNS records to my own ip at freedns, and my site was back online with minimal downtime. Slightly annoyingly after that work, ukhost4u’s customer service turned out to be excellent, and we had the issue resolved in a couple of hours. Now I just need to swap the DNS records back again…

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