= PostGIS Hosters = List of hosters that people run PostGIS on and are happy with. Note many of these are standard ISPs or standard Cloud Hosting providers with no specific expertise in PostgreSQL/PostGIS, but people like them for the price, speed, and or support for their work loads. * [http://www.hostgis.com/ HostGIS] offers both PostGIS and UMN Mapserver - See recommendation [http://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/postgis-users/2008-July/020408.html from Bruce Rindahl] and [http://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/postgis-users/2008-July/020407.html David Fawcett] * [http://hub.org/ Hub.org] - See recommendation from [http://lists.osgeo.org/pipermail/postgis-users/2008-July/020424.html Sean Montague] * [http://opengeo.thegismarketplace.com/ OpenGeo Suite on SkyGone Cloud Hosting] - comes in Community, Enterprise Cloud Edition, and Enterprise Auto Scaling. Entrprise editions include technical support for OpenGeo Stack components (PostGIS/Geoserver) and all are preconfigured with OpenGeo Cloud edition stack consisting of PostGIS /GeoServer, GeoExplorer. * [http://www.webfaction.com WebFaction] - See recommendation [http://postgis.refractions.net/pipermail/postgis-users/2008-July/020460.html from William Temperley] * [http://developer.amazonwebservices.com/connect/kbcategory.jspa?categoryID=84 Amazon Webservices AWS-EC2] recommended by [http://postgis.refractions.net/pipermail/postgis-users/2008-July/020463.html Randy George] Although Amazon EBS block storage is not the greatest for database work and in fact many with high peformance needs have had issues with it, there are many Amazon Images (AMIs) preconfigured with PostGIS and Open Source GIS stacks so it is great for getting your feet wet. It also also allows you to shut off the server and not incur additional charges. * [http://os.umbrellaconsulting.com/wiki/AmazonEC2 Setting up PostGIS on Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud] * [http://www.gogrid.com GoGrid.com] See [http://www.spatiallyadjusted.com/2008/11/21/arcgis-in-the-cloud/ note on James Fee Blog from No Love] [http://www.postgresonline.com/journal/archives/198-GoGrid-and-Amazon-EC-Cloud-Servers-compare.html Regina's experience on GoGrid vs. Amazon EC] GoGrid offers both Windows and Linux Cloudhosting and their tech support is extremely responsive. While they don't specifically offer PostgreSQL/PostGIS, this is something you can install yourself easily and people are beginning to build community images for. * [http://www.devisland.net Development Island] Offers PostGIS hosting * [http://www.linode.com Linode Cloudhosting] This is a cloud hosting provider that we know a couple of people running PostgreSQL/PostGIS on and are happy with. We have one client that runs on this and price/support/speed are happy with it. They offer many Linux OS to choose from but offer no Windows hosting. * [http://www.acugis.com AcuGIS] Offers PostGIS hosting in the United States and Europe. Your choice of PostGIS 1.5 or 2.0, along with PostgreSQL 8.4, 9.1, or 9.2. AcuGIS combines the convenience of cPanel with the power of PostGIS. Install PostGIS on your databases in one-click. == PostGIS DbaaS == * [http://cartodb.com CartoDb] PostGIS in the cloud without the maintenance hassle * [http://aws.amazon.com/rds/postgresql/#Postgis Amazon PostgreSQL RDS] comes packaged with PostgreSQL 9.3 PostGIS 2.1 (use standard CREATE EXTENSION postgis;) * [http://blog.geomusings.com/2013/12/11/building-a-simple-geodata-service-with-node-and-amazon-rds Building a simple geodata service with node and amazon rds] * [http://boundlessgeo.com/2013/12/postgis-amazon-rds Using PostGIS on Amazon RDS with OpenGeo Suite] * [http://blog.safe.com/2013/12/postgis-on-aws-rds PostGIS on AWS RDS and using with Safe FME] * [https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/postgis Heroku Postgres] still in flux current seems to be PostGIS 2.0 and PostgreSQL 9.2