Aegir Service Providers

Here is a list of consulting and hosting firms offering paid support for the Aegir Hosting System:

Koumbit
Koumbit employs several of Aegir's core maintainer team (including Anarcat, the project lead), as well as developers of several contributed projects (such as UC_hosting and Provision-CiviCRM). Koumbit manages one of the largest Aegir deployments, hosting hundreds of custom developed websites, as well as one of the first providers to automate site ordering and provision with the uc_hosting module.
Omega8.cc
Omega8.cc offers dedicated Aegir hosting service since July 2009, using custom developed, high performance cloud servers configuration. Hosted options include SSH and Drush access, with simplified Aegir interface. Omega8.cc supports also remote Aegir installations and maintenance on Client's servers. Simplified and optimized for single server installations system configuration is open-sourced since 2009 and available as a dual-core Barracuda and Octopus installer.
Ergon Logic Enterprises (a node in the Koumbit Networks)
a.k.a. Christopher "ergonlogic" Gervais. When not helping build Koumbit's AegirVPS services and pilot partner programs, has been developing a SaaS stack for Aegir, extending Open Atrium in some interesting ways, and building a local Aegir development environment on top of Vagrant and Virtualbox, along with recently starting to build a Debian package for Drush Make. When he can find the time, he works towards building OpenAtria.com, as a reference implementation of many of these ideas. If you can get his attention, he's sometimes available for Aegir marketing and strategy consulting.

#1

Would anyone mind if I added us to this list? We've been providing Aegir support for years now!

Something like:

ThinkDrop Consulting

ThinkDrop provides Infrastructure and Architecture consulting around Aegir. We are the creators of DevShop, the first open source Drupal Environment Manager, built on Aegir. We have also created a number of other Aegir addons like Aegir Drush Aliases and the Hosting & Provision Solr modules.

#2

Go for it! It's a wiki page like all the rest, after allĀ :)