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Originally Posted by john551
The other solution is hosting with two different hosts and setting up your domain name nameservers to point to each host (Set primary ns1 to host1 and secondary ns2 to host2) as mentioned by dk40k in the above post. This way all the requests to your domain will be send to host1. If host1 does not respond, the host2 will be queried.
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No, thats not correct. Setting different values for you domain's DNS will not "guarantee" that you will be redirected to the 2nd website if the 1st one is down. Instead, all it will do is to send the traffic randomly to any one of the two servers. So, 50% of the hits will go to one server and the other 50% will go to the other server. And, when the DNS sends the traffic to a server, it does NOT detect whether the destination server is online or not. So, if your 2nd server is down, and DNS sends your traffic to the 2nd server, your visitors will simply fail to see your site.
If you wish to achive this functionality using DNS, try using the "failover DNS" feature from UltraDNS.com. This will REALLY detect which server is running & will redirect accordingly. In this case, your mail domain will ALWAYS point to UltraDNS.com's DNS, and in your UltraDNS.com's account will be set based on what servers you wish to use during failover.
Hope this helps. Good luck. 
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