HostedToday to Donate 10% of Revenue to Charity

January 24, 2007 (PRLEAP.COM) Technology News
Hostedtoday.com ( http://www.hostedtoday.com ), a leader in affordable linux web hosting has announced plans to donate 10% of all revenue in 2007 to charity. HostedTodays committment to help make our society better is not just talk. Leading the way for a better tomorrow starts with every company doing their part.

We allow our employees paid time off to volunteer their time to local charities, but we felt like as a company we needed to make more of a commitment to a better tomorrow. said President, Rachel Daghir. We hope this will help set an example for other companies and let our customers know that we care about more then just providing the best possible hosting solution.

Hostedtoday continues its astonishing growth rate by providing many faeatures like a FREE Website Builder tool, Ruby on Rails support, a new set of servers, and all their servers having been upgraded to new Dual Xeon 2.4 GHz with hyperthreading, Dual Drive RAID1 mirroring technology, and off-site backups. Fantastico Deluxe has been included with all hosting plans free of charge, and HostedToday offers a 100% customer safisfaction 30 money back refund policy. Hostedtoday includes all the tools you need to be successful on the internet. During its 5 year history, HostedToday has been providing the utmost support to its customer with affordable web hosting accounts, no hidden charges, fast servers, and feature rich hosting plans.

About Hostedtoday.com
Hostedtoday.com ( http://www.hostedtoday.com ) is a leading web hosting company that has been in business for 5 years. HostedToday prides itself on the best customer service and support. All servers have multiple cpus, RAID mirrored drives, and are spread across multiple datacenters to ensure maximum uptime. HostedToday has been awarded numerous industry awards and enjoys one of the highest rention rates in the industry. They also provide a 1000% satisfaction guarantee 30 day money back refund with no questions asked.