Features and Ease of Use
Fiber sells three shared website hosting packages, which come as standard with the following core features:
- From 50GB to 100GB disk space
- From 1TB to 2TB monthly traffic
- Free Let’s Encrypt SSL certificate
- 100 to 200 add-on domains
- SSL certificates
- DirectAdmin control panel
The three shared website hosting packages are called (in English) Home, Home+, and Portal. The two Home plans are similar insofar as they both include 50GB disk space and 1TB traffic, but the Home+ plan includes 150 domains rather than the 100 offered by the regular Home plan. The highest Portal package comes with 100GB traffic and 2TB disk space which makes it a pretty sizable plan. All of the plans come with a free .eu/.ee/.ru/.com/.lv/.lt/.fi domain and a free Let’s Encrypt SSL certificate as well as SSH access.
As well as their three shared hosting plans, Fiber also sells server rental and server colocation. Their dedicated server base plan comes with 8 streams, 16GB of memory, 2 x 2TB HDD, and you can contact the company to configure the servers as needed.
Unfortunately, Fiber’s website was pretty empty when I visited it. The homepage looked like it was still a work-in-progress and there was no information about data centers or servers. In their favor, although their plans aren’t feature-packed, they do have high resource quotas.
Pricing and Support
Fiber’s resources are really high, with even the lowest package providing 50GB of disk space and 1TB of traffic (which is much more than most everyday users need). Plus, domains and SSL certificates are included free of charge. The downside is that there are very few value-added features apart from SSH access. Taking everything into account, the prices are okay.
You have the option to sign up for Fiber’s plans on one, three, six, or twelve-month terms. When you choose a longer plan upfront, you’ll receive significant discounts on the pricing.
To get support, you can create a ticket, send an email, or call the company. They don’t advertise their business hours, and there is no knowledge base, but there is a client area that requires you to log in, so who knows what hidden gems lie behind the login page?