Contributed by Carpesomediem
Paid hosting generally allows for a web designer to also have a more usable domain name to go with their pages. This gives the web designer a name on the internet instead of one long URL that nobody can remember. This cements the webmaster in stone on the world wide web for their time maintaining, updating and continuing to grow not only in size for the pages but in skill for the web designer his or herself.
Once you make the leap from free to paid services, it's up to you how you want to use them. Since paid services don't hold your hands to make sure you know what you're doing - don't get me wrong, they help - you're on your own as to how you go about designing, maintaining and monitoring your pages. For the most part, unless your site develops into a traffic generating dream machine, you won't have to worry about maxing out your bandwidth hourly.
You also, depending on the package purchased, have to stress about whether or not your new page is going to fit on the server for lack of space. You can always purchase additional space if that truly is a problem.
Paid hosting can't go wrong and after the beginner gets the feel of the free services the internet has to offer, they should do themselves the service and upgrade to not only learn more about web designing but also to show the world wide web what their web page is truly capable of becoming
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