Bort, Julie (18 de abril de 2014). «These Guys Met On Craigslist And 2 Years Later Their Startup Raised $37 Million And Is Threatening Amazon»(html). BusinessInsider(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 21 de abril de 2014. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «"We met on Craigslist, but it wasn't the personals," laughs co-founder and CMO Wainer. "Ben and Moisey put out a job listing and I answered it." Wainer was bored with a dead-end job at a startup where he had no equity, and was surfing for new options. He had gotten an offer from another hot New York startup, ZocDoc, but made a "big bet" to go become a founder instead. The bet paid off. DigitalOcean landed a spot in the TechStars 2012 class in Boulder, Colo., and the team built a cloud service that quickly became astoundingly popular.»
digitalocean.com
«calable compute services»(html). DigitalOcean(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 23 de junio de 2018. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «Enables Droplets to "talk" within the same datacenter. Traffic sent between Droplets across the private network will not count toward your bandwidth costs.»
Reich, Dan (19 de septiembre de 2012). «Startup CEO: Ben Uretsky on Launching Digital Ocean, Raising Money And Joining TechStars»(html). Forbes(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 23 de septiembre de 2012. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «Ben Uretsky thought the current state of web infrastructure is complicated so he decided to build a team, join TechStars, and launch a business called DigitalOcean. Having once worked in the computer networking and virtualization business myself, I understand how complicated this world can be.»
«DigitalOcean vs AWS»(html). Linuxhint(en inglés). 21 de enero de 2018. Archivado desde el original el 21 de julio de 2018. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «DigitalOcean is a cloud computing service which provides a wide variety of features, and is known for their simplicity and elegant look in the web interface. Due to the simplicity, it doesn’t take much time to roll out the cloud computer instance. In fact, it takes less than 2 minutes for creating a cloud computer instance, and being available to public with an accessible public IP address. Initially, it allocates a single IP4 address to the instance which is known as a droplet in DigitalOcean platform, but it’s possible to acquire an IP6 address through the droplet settings page which is unique per each droplet.»
meduza.io
«Russia blocks tens of thousands of IP addresses owned by the cloud infrastructure provider DigitalOcean»(html). Meduza(en inglés). 18 de abril de 2018. Archivado desde el original el 19 de abril de 2018. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «Russia’s federal censor has blocked tens of thousands of IP addresses owned by the U.S.-based cloud infrastructure provider DigitalOcean. According to a copy of Roskomnadzor’s “out-load” list, late on April 18, the agency ordered Russian ISPs to start blocking the subnets 167.99.0.0/16 and 206.189.0.0/16, each of which masks 65,000 IP addresses.»
netcraft.com
news.netcraft.com
Mutton, Paul (11 de diciembre de 2013). «DigitalOcean now growing faster than Amazon»(html). Netcraft(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 5 de enero de 2014. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «DigitalOcean is now the 15th largest hosting company in terms of web-facing computers — a remarkable feat considering DigitalOcean had only 280 web-facing computers at the start of this year. Although Amazon is still the largest hosting company (by web-facing computers) and has nearly six times as many web-facing computers in total, the rapid growth at DigitalOcean may have startled those at Amazon who thought their major competitors were Microsoft Azure and Rackspace.»
«DigitalOcean Reviews 2016, WordPress Hosting and Customer Support»(html). Reviewplan(en inglés). 2 de julio de 2016. Archivado desde el original el 5 de julio de 2016. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «Please take not DigitalOcean is not the same with the regular shared web hosting company, they use the term “droplet”. In simple words, it is a server space that store all your website information, including files, databases, etc. They maintain the hardware and network that Droplets run on, and you are responsible for the setup, applications, etc. It is self-managed. They do not access to the droplets. Moreover, they do not provide domain registration service and do not handle email like the way regular web hosting company does. You will need to point your domain to the DigitalOcean droplet.»
techcrunch.com
Lardinois, Frederic (23 de marzo de 2014). «Digital Ocean’s Journey From TechStars Reject To Cloud-Hosting Darling»(html). TechCrunch(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 24 de marzo de 2014. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «In the process of trying to secure funding, DigitalOcean’s founders met up with IA Ventures’ Brad Gillespie who suggested the company apply to TechStars New York. The only problem with that suggestion: the application deadline was just about 24 hours away. So the team hunkered down for a day and finished the application. “That was the first time we really solidified our mission in writing,” Uretsky admitted. In addition, the founders had to record 30-second video clips for one part of the application. Given the deadline, the founders used their iPhones to record them.»
Farr, Christina (7 de agosto de 2013). «Developer favorite Digital Ocean nabs $3.2M for its cloud hosting service»(html). Venture Beat(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 9 de agosto de 2013. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «Fast-growing cloud hosting services startup Digital Ocean just closed a $3.2 million round. The company launched last year, but claims to already have over 35,000 customers, who have developed 340,000 virtual servers. IA Ventures, the firm that led the round, invested off the back of this growth. (...) The startup is a graduate of accelerator program TechStars, and also received participation in its funding round from Michael Arrington’s CrunchFund.»
Novet, Jordan (24 de diciembre de 2013). «DigitalOcean’s cloud surpasses Amazon Web Services in one category»(html). Venture Beat(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 26 de diciembre de 2013. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «According to Netcraft, a company that provides vendor-netural monthly data on Internet infrastructure, DigitalOcean has added more web-facing computers month over month than Amazon Web Services in Netcraft’s November and December surveys. The metric reflects the number of machines acting as web servers and handling traffic for websites. This hardly means DigitalOcean has overtaken Amazon as the top cloud provider, only that it’s growing fast as a cloud for sites to run from.»
«DigitalOcean Datacenter & Server Locations, Regions Map»(html). WebHostWhat(en inglés). 12 de agosto de 2017. Archivado desde el original el 31 de diciembre de 2017. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «This is a complete list of currently available DigitalOcean datacenter locations, server locations and a regions map — and where to speed test servers.»
Reich, Dan (19 de septiembre de 2012). «Startup CEO: Ben Uretsky on Launching Digital Ocean, Raising Money And Joining TechStars»(html). Forbes(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 23 de septiembre de 2012. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «Ben Uretsky thought the current state of web infrastructure is complicated so he decided to build a team, join TechStars, and launch a business called DigitalOcean. Having once worked in the computer networking and virtualization business myself, I understand how complicated this world can be.»
Bort, Julie (18 de abril de 2014). «These Guys Met On Craigslist And 2 Years Later Their Startup Raised $37 Million And Is Threatening Amazon»(html). BusinessInsider(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 21 de abril de 2014. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «"We met on Craigslist, but it wasn't the personals," laughs co-founder and CMO Wainer. "Ben and Moisey put out a job listing and I answered it." Wainer was bored with a dead-end job at a startup where he had no equity, and was surfing for new options. He had gotten an offer from another hot New York startup, ZocDoc, but made a "big bet" to go become a founder instead. The bet paid off. DigitalOcean landed a spot in the TechStars 2012 class in Boulder, Colo., and the team built a cloud service that quickly became astoundingly popular.»
Lardinois, Frederic (23 de marzo de 2014). «Digital Ocean’s Journey From TechStars Reject To Cloud-Hosting Darling»(html). TechCrunch(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 24 de marzo de 2014. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «In the process of trying to secure funding, DigitalOcean’s founders met up with IA Ventures’ Brad Gillespie who suggested the company apply to TechStars New York. The only problem with that suggestion: the application deadline was just about 24 hours away. So the team hunkered down for a day and finished the application. “That was the first time we really solidified our mission in writing,” Uretsky admitted. In addition, the founders had to record 30-second video clips for one part of the application. Given the deadline, the founders used their iPhones to record them.»
Farr, Christina (7 de agosto de 2013). «Developer favorite Digital Ocean nabs $3.2M for its cloud hosting service»(html). Venture Beat(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 9 de agosto de 2013. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «Fast-growing cloud hosting services startup Digital Ocean just closed a $3.2 million round. The company launched last year, but claims to already have over 35,000 customers, who have developed 340,000 virtual servers. IA Ventures, the firm that led the round, invested off the back of this growth. (...) The startup is a graduate of accelerator program TechStars, and also received participation in its funding round from Michael Arrington’s CrunchFund.»
Novet, Jordan (24 de diciembre de 2013). «DigitalOcean’s cloud surpasses Amazon Web Services in one category»(html). Venture Beat(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 26 de diciembre de 2013. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «According to Netcraft, a company that provides vendor-netural monthly data on Internet infrastructure, DigitalOcean has added more web-facing computers month over month than Amazon Web Services in Netcraft’s November and December surveys. The metric reflects the number of machines acting as web servers and handling traffic for websites. This hardly means DigitalOcean has overtaken Amazon as the top cloud provider, only that it’s growing fast as a cloud for sites to run from.»
Mutton, Paul (11 de diciembre de 2013). «DigitalOcean now growing faster than Amazon»(html). Netcraft(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 5 de enero de 2014. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «DigitalOcean is now the 15th largest hosting company in terms of web-facing computers — a remarkable feat considering DigitalOcean had only 280 web-facing computers at the start of this year. Although Amazon is still the largest hosting company (by web-facing computers) and has nearly six times as many web-facing computers in total, the rapid growth at DigitalOcean may have startled those at Amazon who thought their major competitors were Microsoft Azure and Rackspace.»
«DigitalOcean Reviews 2016, WordPress Hosting and Customer Support»(html). Reviewplan(en inglés). 2 de julio de 2016. Archivado desde el original el 5 de julio de 2016. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «Please take not DigitalOcean is not the same with the regular shared web hosting company, they use the term “droplet”. In simple words, it is a server space that store all your website information, including files, databases, etc. They maintain the hardware and network that Droplets run on, and you are responsible for the setup, applications, etc. It is self-managed. They do not access to the droplets. Moreover, they do not provide domain registration service and do not handle email like the way regular web hosting company does. You will need to point your domain to the DigitalOcean droplet.»
«calable compute services»(html). DigitalOcean(en inglés). Archivado desde el original el 23 de junio de 2018. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «Enables Droplets to "talk" within the same datacenter. Traffic sent between Droplets across the private network will not count toward your bandwidth costs.»
«DigitalOcean vs AWS»(html). Linuxhint(en inglés). 21 de enero de 2018. Archivado desde el original el 21 de julio de 2018. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «DigitalOcean is a cloud computing service which provides a wide variety of features, and is known for their simplicity and elegant look in the web interface. Due to the simplicity, it doesn’t take much time to roll out the cloud computer instance. In fact, it takes less than 2 minutes for creating a cloud computer instance, and being available to public with an accessible public IP address. Initially, it allocates a single IP4 address to the instance which is known as a droplet in DigitalOcean platform, but it’s possible to acquire an IP6 address through the droplet settings page which is unique per each droplet.»
«Russia blocks tens of thousands of IP addresses owned by the cloud infrastructure provider DigitalOcean»(html). Meduza(en inglés). 18 de abril de 2018. Archivado desde el original el 19 de abril de 2018. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «Russia’s federal censor has blocked tens of thousands of IP addresses owned by the U.S.-based cloud infrastructure provider DigitalOcean. According to a copy of Roskomnadzor’s “out-load” list, late on April 18, the agency ordered Russian ISPs to start blocking the subnets 167.99.0.0/16 and 206.189.0.0/16, each of which masks 65,000 IP addresses.»
«DigitalOcean Datacenter & Server Locations, Regions Map»(html). WebHostWhat(en inglés). 12 de agosto de 2017. Archivado desde el original el 31 de diciembre de 2017. Consultado el 20 de julio de 2018. «This is a complete list of currently available DigitalOcean datacenter locations, server locations and a regions map — and where to speed test servers.»