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One of the widely used and well known control panels is cPanel. There are also other alternatives that you could consider such as Plesk, ISPConfig, etc., depending on your needs. cPanel is one of the most widely used control panels for web hosting. It is easy to use, highly customizable and majority of the hosts are configured to serve its multiple layouts that are available. It comes with various pre-installed options, and from it you can manage email and FTP accounts, your add-on and subdomains, MySQL database, applications, security, and statistics. Everything that we’ve talked about in this guide you can find in cPanel. After installing and answering a few questions to customize your cPanel, you are ready to use it. It has an interface for website owners and server owners. Besides the already mentioned pre-installed options, you can add almost anything you want to.
In the Web Host Manager part of the cPanel, you can do all things that are related to administrative server hosting. There you can add and manage your accounts, create hosting plans, reseller accounts, change security features, configure server, scale your hosting capabilities and much more. While it is easy and intuitive enough for beginners, cPanel is powerful enough to meet the needs of more advanced users. It is most probably the most used control panel tool after cPanel. It is also a commercial control panel and similar in many aspects, from versatility to robust options. There is a number of people that will recommend Plesk over cPanel because of somewhat cheaper price in the long run, but in the end it all comes down to user interface and whether it suits you or not. While CMSs refer to the platforms that makes the whole website, like WordPress, Joomla or Drupal that we’ve mentioned in Part 3 of this guide, there are number of smaller and bigger web tools that are built to do a specific thing on your website.
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