QuickPacket: $1.75/month OpenVZ-256MB/512MB/40GB/1000GB Atlanta
QuickPacket is a well-established foreign VPS hosting provider. It was established in 2003. It provides products based on OpenVZ and XEN architecture.
IndoVirtue: $7/monthOpenVZ-512MB/10G SSD/200GB Singapore
IndoVirtue is a relatively unfamiliar foreign VPS service provider. It provides SSD disk VPS packages based on the OpenVZ architecture. The computer room is in Singapore .
BuyVM: $5.95/month OpenVZ-512MB/1GB/50GB/2TB San Jose
BuyVM should be familiar to friends who often look for foreign VPS, especially its $15 annual payment, which has always been popular and is not often available. However, this year, buyvm has been on the market several times for a long time.
INIZ: $7/year OpenVZ-128MB/10GB/250GB Los Angeles & New York
INIZ is a foreign VPS service provider founded in 2008. Its predecessor was StormVZ. The host provider was voted highly by LET readers in the third and fourth quarters of last year and the first quarter of this year, which shows that users recognize it. The degree is good.
CloudcandyHost: $3.2/monthOpenVZ-1GB/50GB/2TB Netherlands
CloudcandyHostThe domain name has been registered since 2013. It is estimated that it has been selling VPS for a short time. This is the first time that Zhiju has shared information about this company.
ServerMania: $4/month OpenVZ-512MB/1GB/30GB/1.25TB New York
ServerMania is a foreign hosting provider registered in Canada, with ten years of industry experience, providing VPS and data centers based on OpenVZ(linux) and XEN(windows) architecture Incl
EtherNetservers: $2/month OpenVZ-768MB/30GB/250GB New York & Los Angeles
EtherNetservers is a foreign VPS hosting provider that has not been established for a long time. I introduced it in January this year. At that time, it was a Phoenix data center. The change was very fast.
MegaWorldHosting: $12/month OpenVZ-2GB/3GB/200GB/2TB Los Angeles
MegaWorldHosting is a foreign VPS hosting provider. It has been providing virtual hosting and VPS products since 2004. The data centers are in Dallas and Los Angeles, and the domestic access speed is good.