CDN.net is a budget content delivery network based on OnApp CDN.
The company sells its service as a ‘low latency CDN’, and the website guarantees sub-50ms latency in the regions you care about. Sounds appealing, although we couldn’t find any details of how this guarantee works.
The website doesn’t make it clear, and the terms of service appears to say no guarantee is possible: “we are not responsible for the operation of any POP [point of presence] or Capacity… and do not guarantee the quality or performance of any POPs.”
The remainder of the service is stripped back, focused on the CDN essentials. There’s GZip compression, free shared SSL, DDoS protection, global load balancing, manual cache management, and real-time data on service operations.
CDN.net is built for simplicity and doesn’t have the low-level configuration options you’ll get elsewhere. Still, experts can take more control by making use of the service API, and in theory there’s enough power here to cover basic applications.
Pricing
CDN.net has three plans. The features are the same in each case, and they only vary in price and the number of POPs.
The CDN-X plan offers 30 POPs in North America and Europe. It’s …read more
Source:: techradar.com – PC and Mac