Dear Blick and WeatherCat fans of bedtime stories . . . . . .

. . . . Looking forward to your chronicling your move from GoDaddy.

. . . . . Remember,
you're askin' for it! . . . .
Our story begins in a deep dark forest (or is that in a galaxy far, far, away?) . . . . .

Actually, my unhappiness with GoDaddy had been a long time in coming but the straw that broke the camel's back was their unilateral switch from UNIX based email (which were included for free in with the UNIX web hosting) to Microsoft office 365 emails. I had taken advantage of the free emails to create addresses for specific purposes. Now every address was costing almost $30. The switch happened at the start of this year when I was facing the first surgeries on my nose. I had little choice but to pare down my addresses and pay.
Fast forward to July and the creation of this thread. After researching all the recommendations here, I finally settled on DreamHost. I didn't find anything against the other recommendations whatsoever. Alas, I couldn't find any independent reviews either. DreamHost was recommended by PC magazine. In that review was another plus: DreamHost is a UNIX-based service. I hoped that would prevent me from suffering another service change like GoDaddy had pulled on me.
As the phase goes: I
"pulled da' trigger" and purchased a DreamHost web hosting service on July 19th. Aware that another nose surgery was looming, I paid the extra money to ask DreamHost to handle the website migration duties (having prudently made my own backup first - j
ust in case!) This process got underway and appeared to be going smoothly.
I was concerned about regaining control of my
canebas.org domain from GoDaddy (and by implication Microsoft.) So on July 23rd, I initiated transferring my domain to DreamHost. Immediately, I got an error:
"Canceled - Invalid EPP/authorization key". I repeated the attempted transfer - with the same failure. At this point I contacted DreamHost technical support for the second time (the first being to handle the website migration.) After batting the problem back and forth a bit, the DreamHost folks concluded that GoDaddy wasn't providing the correct transfer key and I needed to contact them about it. After some GoDaddy tech support chat, I finally had a valid transfer request started from the DreamHost end. Key to this exercise was specifying that I wanted to use the DreamHost domain name servers - that should have overridden any Microsoft control of my domain.
Stay tuned on this one!In the meantime, everything was going just -
swell - at DreamHost.
![Bang Head [banghead]](https://athena.trixology.com/Smileys/default/banghead.gif)
The server which was supposed to host my files crashed in the middle of the migration! This involved more involved communication between DreamHost technical support and I. I also made some additional backups -
caution is always the better part of valor! Finally on July 28th, my websites appeared to be behaving correctly. There was some additional issues as DreamHost had a real fight getting this server to behave, but everything on
canebas.org seemed to be in order -
almost . . . . .
it was time to pull the plug on Microsoft Office 365 and switch my emails to DreamHost. However, every attempt I made had no effect. I could create addresses on DreamHost, but only the old Microsoft addresses were working. At this point I had to shift priorities and prepare for the August 9th surgery on my nose. So I left things as they were.
This past Monday (August 22nd,) I finally felt I had enough time to settle with GoDaddy once and for all. So I logged into my GoDaddy account and canceled on all services. Immediately,
canebas.org became unreachable -
what!?!?!?! 
Time for another desperate trouble ticket at DreamHost. Once more those folks came to the rescue. Remember, that I requested that GoDaddy switch the domain name servers to DreamHost when I requested the domain transfer -
they did not honor that request! As a result when I canceled my old web hosting, GoDaddy deleted
canebas.org from their domain name servers. Since my domain wasn't listed in any domain name servers, there was no way to look up the location of
canebas.org on DreamHost. Thankfully, DreamHost was able to manually switch the domain name servers to their own (as intended all along,) and
canebas.org was soon back online once more.
Finally, I could create the email addresses on DreamHost that I had canceled from Microsoft. The next to last hurtle was to coax WeatherCat to work with DreamHost which I resolved with a little help from Grand.
The final obstacle was seeking a refund for the unused portions of the services I had with GoDaddy. It took two attempts, but at least they did come clean and refunded fairly what I had not used.
After this protracted experience, I can second Grand's recommendation of DreamHost. That does not detract in any way from the merits of QTH or CronWeb. Other WeatherCatters are indeed happy with them. What I can say is that I really gave the DreamHost technical support folks a workout and they delivered.
The other recommendation I can give be cautious and allow yourself plenty of time. You might not run into Murphy's law at nearly every turn - but plan as if you will!!
Cheers, Edouard
![Cheers [cheers1]](https://athena.trixology.com/Smileys/default/food-smiley-004.gif)