Why Lime Daley?

Answer 1: Superior service and support


At Lime Daley, we believe that God has given us our gifts and talents and we hope that you will see a reflection of Him in our work. What this means for you is that you will receive honest, dependable answers and incredible service.

Our beliefs also extend to the load on our servers, where we don't oversell bandwidth or disk space, and hope that our users don't ever use the space they bought. We sell what we have, and don't sell what we don't have. The most common initial response from our customers when first signing up is, "Wow. Your server is so much faster than my old host." That is closely followed by: "I can't believe you respond to my questions so quickly!"

You won't get fast pre-sales responses and then slow responses once you have signed the check -- most queries are answered within thirty minutes, and never more than 12 hours and you can always call or have someone paged to get the work done more quickly.

While we believe that our hosting is the best that is available, if you are looking for cheapo hosting, you should go elsewhere -- and realize that you get what you pay for: downtime, overloaded servers, various restrictions on resource usage, and many more. We do make a profit on your business, and we aren't interested in sales gimmicks to trick you into becoming our customer. We haven't ever had a customer leave and as far as I know, every customer is extremely satisfied with Lime Daley.


Answer 2: The Drink and Inspiration


Here is the recipe for a Lime Daley:
  • ice to taste
  • 3 tablespoons lime juice
  • 2 drops Boyajian lime oil
  • 1 twelve-ounce bottle Blenheim "Old #3" (red cap) ginger ale

Put ice in a tall glass. Add lime juice and lime oil. Slowly pour in Blenheim. Stir well. Be prepared for the strongest kick a non-alcoholic drink can have.

We based this drink on a Lime Rickey, a favorite with Star Island visitors.

Heather's Dad thought it appropriate to name our modified recipe Lime Daley. Heather fixed Jon a Lime Daley while he was researching domain names and wracking his brain for a good company name.