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October 23rd, 2008

Amazon: EC2 is production ready; Will enterprises bite?

Posted by Larry Dignan @ 8:24 am

Categories: Amazon, Cloud computing, Datacenter, Enterprise 2.0, General, Hardware Infrastructure, Software Infrastructure, Web Technology

Tags: SLA, Amazon.com Inc., EC2, Windows Instance, Service Level Management, Microsoft Windows, It Operations, It service Management, Operating Systems, Software

Amazon Web Services EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud) service has dropped the beta tag, added a service level agreement and launched Windows and SQL betas and plans a management console.

Add it up and it appears that Amazon is giving prospective enterprise customers most of the things they need to take the e-tailer-turned-cloud player seriously.

Amazon CTO Werner Vogels details the interest in the cloud by the enterprise:

In recent weeks in my discussions with many of our Amazon Web Services customers I have seen a heightened interest in moving functionality into the AWS cloud to get a better grasp on controlling cost. And this is across the board; from young businesses to Fortune 500 enterprises, from research labs to television networks, all are concerned about reducing upfront cost associated with the new ventures and reducing waste in existing operations.

Of the items most notable in Amazon’s EC2 announcement:

  • EC2 has a service level agreement (SLA) that promises 99.95 percent uptime. What’s notable here is that the SLA works at the “region” level. Today, Amazon’s cloud has only one region, but will have more. Each region has an SLA.
  • Windows instances are available. EC2 supports Windows in a beta program with pricing at a little more than 12 cents an hour. SQL Server is also available. Amazon said it will show Windows on EC2 at Microsoft’s professional developers conference (PDC).
  • In 2009, Amazon is planning a management console to configure the EC2 service along with load balancing, scaling and monitoring tools.

Given stretched IT budgets Amazon’s recent moves are likely to find a receptive audience.

Larry DignanLarry Dignan is Editor in Chief of ZDNet and Editorial Director of ZDNet sister site TechRepublic. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 2 Talkback(s)
ISVs, ISVs, ISVs
This is good stuff, but 90% of the audience short-term will be ISVs (software companies) - specifically companies selling on-premise business apps today - and service providers of various stripes. (Read the rest)
Posted by: neilwd Posted on: 10/23/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Windows 2003 and SQL Server 2005 on Amazon EC2  Roger_Jennings | 10/23/08
ISVs, ISVs, ISVs  neilwd | 10/23/08

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