AlphaRacks is a foreign VPS service provider established in 2013. It provides VPS products based on OpenVZ and KVM architecture. The data center is in Los Angeles (with QN or PAC computer room). Black Friday is approaching, and host manufacturers have released several special packages, with the lowest annual payment of only $4, which is a slight improvement in configuration compared to the previously released annual payment of $3.99.
I personally think that the most cost-effective among these special packages is the $9/year one. Let’s take a look at this configuration information first.
CPU: 2 cores
Memory: 512MB
Hard drive: 15GB/RAID10
Monthly traffic: 1000GB/100Mbps
Virtual architecture: OpenVZ
IP/Panel: 1IPv4/SolusVM
The test IP is still given to QN, but please note that their host may also be located in the PAC Los Angeles computer room. In addition to the one above, there are several others, which I will list directly below.
$4/year=96MB RAM, 5GB HDD, 150GB Monthly Bandwidth, 100Mbps Port – Order NOW
$5/year=128MB RAM, 10GB HDD, 250GB Monthly Bandwidth, 100Mbps Port – Order NOW
$15/year=1GB RAM, 25GB HDD, 2TB Monthly Bandwidth, 1Gbps Port – Order NOW
$24/year=2GB RAM, 30GB HDD, 3TB Monthly Bandwidth, 1Gbps Port – Order NOW
NOTE: Order links will be permanently CLOSED after Black Friday, on 11/28/15 12:00 AM PST
There were some discordant comments in the comments on the previous article about AlphaRacks, so I will repeat some words at the end of this article: This blog is about sharing cheap VPS information, not I recommend the best overseas VPS that does not cause convulsions. If you want to use the best one that does not cause convulsions, my personal suggestion has always been to register and use a domestic host. The problems that appeared in the reviews about this host company include: poor customer service response, mediocre product performance, and scammers (to be honest, the reviewer did not give anything relevant and verifiable for this definition). For cheap user-managed products, try not to have too high expectations for performance. As long as the hen is not down or the computer room network is disconnected, customer service may ignore it.