small site + your content = minimal hits; big site + your content = mass distribution
Not necessarily, I found a good way to bring traffic to your site (interestingly, I never thought of it at the time) is to create your own 3D models and content. As soon as you announce what you are making, you produce a teaser shot or WIP shot.
Say you want to give people a 'sneek peak' at the item you are working on, but can't finish it? Websites are a good way as I regard the DLS as more for complete objects, thats why most of my stuff is on my website rather than the DLS.
This is why its a good reason to start content creation. But if you are going to do that, don't bother if you aren't any good at it. Quality content really does help distribution and keeps everyone happy. Crap content and people will still use it for free, but a few will moan.
I actually have a WIP server for the purpose of distributing my content, which is a home server. I found that cutting out the "upload process" speeds things up drastically. You can also upload things "live" rather than going through the upload process. Ok, ok, my server suffers down time from power cuts, upgrades, downgrades, etc, but most traffic for me is not mid day, but morning and afternoons. I know that as many from posts in another forum, use the site in the afternoons.
It is also has this ability to loose the wireless network (the router is crap!), dropping off the internet, because the router dropped out, crashing and me knocking it over. Oh, the upload speed is limited, I've got only 1mb upload!
But, its an interesting idea. By the way, it runs Server 2008 (Original) and is a Dell Optiplex GX270, it uses the following hardware:
Pentium 4 2.4ghz processor
512mb RAM (going to 4GB when I can afford it!)
Intel 845G chipset I think
250GB SATA Hard drive
DVD ROM drive (It no longer writes)
Wireless KB and Mouse
Hacked CPU cooling fan (I had a 4 wire CPU fan and a 5 wire plug that needed to go into a 3 wire socket, without the fan trying to take off! My dad helped me on this and ground the blue wire, not been a problem since.)
Belkin Wireless card
TI firewire card
No AGP card yet.
And it looks like this:
101 things to do with an old computer. I actually fleaBayed this PC for £11, I was going to use for my mini-ITX mobo, but I found it wasn't practical on a number of levels, so I kept it and notice it would work, if I changed 5 capacitors (yep, one of those), I recently did and it worked, its been on for about 7 days non stop and not given me any problems. Putting on caps is easy, taking them off is the hard part.

(Its far easier to use a rework station, trust me on that, if you got a solder sucker and a very narrow soldering iron, its very easy.) Other than that, it was made of "recycled parts". These days, I mix new with old, the only new PC I built, is my ITX desktop. However, the case was salvaged and my dad got the old dual core AMD internals, that may change in the future, as I plan to hang it off the back of the monitor.
The Dell was made from a processor of my dads old computer (scrapped - mobo USB failure), the caps came from the same mobo, the processor and ram came from the same mobo, the old hard drive was my old SATA before I went 1TB only, the DVD Drive I found floating around, the same with the floppy, while the heatsink, fan, rails and PSU were all eBayed.
Now, theres an idea, host your own website. IF you would like to see the one the server is hosting, its
http://81.6.245.27/ and the files?
http://81.6.245.27/files . (And my IP is static, so you don't need to change your bookmarks.)