I made something similar and turned it into a service [1] focused on WordPress, but unfortunately there hasn't been much interest from people as I thought there would be, though that could be due to my lack of marketing.
My goal was the same, to make hosting more portable with features like snapshotting and restoration of WP sites across servers and to even eventually expand beyond just servers, to bring in domain registrars and cloud storage to be able to move things around easier. For example: you have a site hosted on AWS EC2 with DNS at Namecheap and nightly backups at Dropbox and let's say the AWS Virginia region goes down. You create a new server in Digital Ocean and restore the snapshot from Dropbox and the linked DNS at Namecheap is auto updated.
The more I thought about this though, I began to realize that maybe these features wouldn't be useful to the audience I wanted to target, which was people who wanted to grow from shared hosting and have something reliable and less noisy neighbors, but still more affordable than managed WP hosts and lastly more control (bring your cloud/server provider).
some unsolicited feedback: your name is terrible(unrelated to your product in any way) and your website doesn't communicate the problem you say you're solving
all i get from your sites landing page is "wordpress hosting" which is not exactly uncommon
scrolling to the bottom shows me some cloud providers. makes me think you just help people host wordpress in the cloud
My goal was the same, to make hosting more portable with features like snapshotting and restoration of WP sites across servers and to even eventually expand beyond just servers, to bring in domain registrars and cloud storage to be able to move things around easier. For example: you have a site hosted on AWS EC2 with DNS at Namecheap and nightly backups at Dropbox and let's say the AWS Virginia region goes down. You create a new server in Digital Ocean and restore the snapshot from Dropbox and the linked DNS at Namecheap is auto updated.
The more I thought about this though, I began to realize that maybe these features wouldn't be useful to the audience I wanted to target, which was people who wanted to grow from shared hosting and have something reliable and less noisy neighbors, but still more affordable than managed WP hosts and lastly more control (bring your cloud/server provider).
[1]: http://pagefog.com