TSB
General => Manufacturer's section => M&R => Topic started by: Gilligan on September 02, 2015, 04:10:26 PM
-
It's always been so slow for me.
I'm talking, I was just on store.mrprint.com and looking at a listing of 1-10 of 14 items. I clicked to go to page 2 and I literally sat there for 45 seconds before it went to the next page. To be fair, it's not always THAT slow... but on average about 5 seconds to even respond that I clicked on a link. Just shows "waiting for store.mrprint.com...." in the status.
This is at home with 50mb cable connection and at the office with a 10mb fiber line, and on multiple devices.
-
Never been slow for me, ever...... LOL..... I've never had an issue ordering on the m&r store or navigating the website so I would assume it's not on their end but I'm not much into the computer knowledge
-
It's always been so slow for me.
I'm talking, I was just on store.mrprint.com and looking at a listing of 1-10 of 14 items. I clicked to go to page 2 and I literally sat there for 45 seconds before it went to the next page. To be fair, it's not always THAT slow... but on average about 5 seconds to even respond that I clicked on a link. Just shows "waiting for store.mrprint.com...." in the status.
This is at home with 50mb cable connection and at the office with a 10mb fiber line, and on multiple devices.
We are moving to a new facility and there will be times during the move when servers will be overloaded.
-
You guys run your webservers in house?
That would explain things.
Ever looked into putting them into a datacenter somewhere?
-
hahaha! i wondered the SAME thing!! i thought it was just me!! lol
glad im not the only one
-
Hosting your own site is a terrible idea these days...unless you just feel like wasting a bunch of time and money to ensure redundancy, security, compliance with all kinds of crap, keep hardware up to date, etc. We hosted our site at my former employer for a while and holy crap was it awful. 99% of the issues we had went away as soon as I got them switched to a VPS. No more issues with outages, no more upgrading the server hardware and licenses every few years, no more huge labor costs to keep it all working, etc.
-
You guys run your webservers in house?
That would explain things.
Ever looked into putting them into a datacenter somewhere?
Thanks for the suggestion but we will keep it in house.