Is Amazon Web Services a realistic platform for Enterprise Development?
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Amazon Web Services are a set of web services for accessing Amazon's catalog. I'm not sure that's what you are thinking of... EDIT: Oh crap, got that one wrong didn't I... |
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They have some case studies on their site, it's definitely realistic for these people. |
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@samjudson: "Amazon Web Services provides developers with direct access to Amazon's robust technology platform. Build on Amazon's suite of web services to enable and enhance your applications." |
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I've had positive experiences with Amazon S3, and limited experience with EC2. Based upon what I have seen, I'm very impressed, albeit not completely convinced that the pricing model will work for a lot of people. It can be very difficult to accurately estimate how much you will end up paying on a usage based model such as they one that they offer. On the other hand, now that they offer painless block storage, S3 snapshots, and extremely powerful EC2 instances, I don't see many limitations. If you wanted to spool up a massive cluster for a few days of insane traffic, I can't image a better (or cheaper for short term spikes) solution. |
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What do you mean by "Enterprise"? Amazon dogfoods their own technology and they are one of the largest web applications out there. I've used S3/EC2 to build web applications and it has never given me any problems. The only concerning thing is their recent uptime problems. Other then that it's a great platform to build on top of. |
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To an extent they do, it would appear. The Amazon store was strangely unaffected throughout the recent S3 problems. |
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