1.
I type in my domain name in a browser but my site
doesn't come up?
It
usually takes two business days for a new or transferred
domain name to start resolving to our servers. If you
previously had your site hosted somewhere else, your
domain name registrar will need to be notified of your
new name servers. If you need assistance with the
transfer, just let us know and we'll be happy to help
you. Many registration companies require a username and
password in order to make a transfer request, so we'll
need this information from you in order to make the
request. Just open up a new support ticket and let us
know this information and we'll make the request for
you.
2.
Why isn't my new home page showing up?
When you
open an account with us, we put up a temporary under
construction page for you and the name of the file is
index.html. Servers recognize a variety of file names as
home pages, and index.html is the most commonly
recognized name. If you upload your own home page and
name it index.htm and don't delete our index.html Under
Construction page, our servers will continue to
recognize the index.html page as the home page. Just
delete or overwrite our index.html file and your new
home page will show up!
3.
When I try to access my site (mydomain.com or IP
address) it says, "Forbidden, You don't have
permission to access / on this server."
This is
caused by not having a home page file inside of your www
directory. Once you upload your homepage file into this
directory, the error message will go away and your new
home page will load. Our servers recognize a number of
file names as home pages: the most common ones are
index.html and index.htm.
4.
Why can't I get to my Control Panel?
User
names and passwords are case sensitive. So if your
password is KiWis, then kiwis won't work and neither
will KIWIS. If you recently changed your password, did
you change it to one that is longer than 8 characters?
Our system will only accept passwords up to 8 characters
long and will truncate them to 8 if you assign a new
password that is too long. Try using just the first 8
characters of your new password and this should get you
into your control panel.
5.
Why am I having problems getting mail to send?
This
problem is usually related to our POP authentication
procedure. When you attempt to send mail, the system
requires that you authenticate to the server first. The
way the server does this is that it first requires you
to log into your pop account with the username and
password you created when the pop account was set up
through the mail manager. After you authenticate by
logging in you have a period of 15 minutes to send mail.
After this 15 minutes expires you will need to
reauthenticate - if you don't you get an error message.
This may
sound more complicated than it actually is. For
instance, when Outlook is opened it automatically
presents you with a username and password box. After you
type these in, Outlook does the rest. Usually you can
just send and receive mail and Outlook will
automatically resubmit your username and password combo.
However, it does so only when you hit the send/receive
button. If you only hit the send button your password is
never resubmitted. Typically the password is only
required when receiving (popping) mail. As you can see
the process defaulted to by Outlook is backwards with
respect to our authentication procedures. Outlook first
sends mail and then receives mail. This is where the
failure comes in. On our system you need to authenticate
(receive) first and then send.
6.
I'm trying to forward my e-mail but it's not working.
In order
to avoid endless mail looping on our server, which can
bog it down and ultimately may cause it to go down, you
will be unable to forward mail as follows:
box1-->box2-->outside
address
This
scenario will only send the mail to the server location
for box2; it won't send the mail to the outside address.
If you want box 1 to go to the outside address, you'll
need to forward it there directly, instead of sending it
to box2 first and from there having it go to the outside
address.
7. I
can't get my mail.
Your pop
server name is mail.yourdomainname.ext. So if your
domain name is pleasehelpmenow.org, your pop server
would be mail.pleasehelpmenow.org
If your
domain name is not yet resolving to our servers, you
will be unable to retrieve your mail from our servers.
If your domain name is still pointed to other servers,
that's where your mail will be going and you can
retrieve it there until the transfer goes through. Also
if this is not your main account name, and it is an
email you created, make sure you use the entire email
address as the username.
8. I
can't get my domain name to transfer at Network
Solutions because the administrative contact e-mail
address that they have is no longer valid.
Unless
you have a special type of an account with Network
Solutions (NSI), they require that you be able to
receive mail at the administrative e-mail address that
they list for your domain name. You must also respond
from this same address, otherwise they will not make the
transfer. If you need to change your administrative
e-mail contact address, visit this link for more
information:
9. Why
aren't my images showing up on my site?
Check
your paths to your images. If the file that you are
using the images in exists in the same directory as your
images, you won't need to list the full path. Here is an
example of the HTML that you would use if your images
are in the same directory as the file that you are using
them in:
<img
src="yourimage.gif">
If your
image is in another directory, like "images"
you'll need to reference the path, such as this:
<img
src="images/yourimage.gif">
Also,
remember that files are case sensitive. For example, in
your HTML document you have a link to FILENAME.HTM but
you named the file contactinfo.htm, it will not work.
The same thing goes with graphics and all other web
documents. What you have in your HTML must match up with
what you name your files.
10.
How do I know if my domain name has been transferred?
You will
know that your domain name has been successfully
transferred and your ISP (Internet Service Provider) has
updated its DNS tables when you are able to FTP to your
account using yourdomain.com as the hostname. Before the
transfer is complete, when you try using yourdomain.com
and the username/password we provided you with, it will
not work.
Another
way to test if it is transferred is to upload a test
file to our servers and then see if you can access it
with your domain name in the path. For example, if you
upload a file called testing.html to our servers, if you
can access it with the path http://www.yourdomainname.com/testing.html,
you'll know that you domain name has been transferred to
our servers. (Make sure that you don't have a file with
the same name already uploaded on your former servers.)
11. Where do I put
my web site files?
When you
log in, you will see a directory called 'www'. This is
the root of your web documents and you need to put any
web site files in this directory. When
www.yourdomain.com is accessed, it looks in this folder
for your default web page document.