Cloud Computing: Amazon links mainstay S3 storage to its low-cost Glacier
Grazed from ZDNet. Author: Jack Clark.
As if providing cloud computing, cloud storage and cloud networking wasn’t enough, Amazon Web Services is now giving customers access to low-cost cloud archiving. The company’s mainstay S3 storage service is now linked to the low-cost Glacier data archival service from within the AWS management console, Amazon said on Tuesday. By chaining the two together, Amazon has got rid of many of the steps that companies previously had to take to back up data from S3 into Glacier.
"Amazon S3 was designed for rapid retrieval. Glacier, in contrast, trades off retrieval time for cost, providing storage for as little at $0.01 per Gigabyte per month while retrieving data within three to five hours," Amazon wrote in a blog post…


Jesse Andrews, an OpenStack veteran who’s done stints at NASA, ANSO Labs and Rackspace, will lead Nebula’s plug-and-play OpenStack development effort as it nears launch, the company said. Companies pushing OpenStack love to boast that they have former NASA technologists on staff. After all, NASA, along with Rackspace, incubated the open-source cloud stack. In that vein, Nebula, which is led by former NASA CTO Chris Kemp, is naming Jesse Andrews as VP of product management. In that capacity Andrews will oversee the entire Nebula project as the company prepares it for launch.
6fusion, a startup focused on “cloud” computing services, has raised $2 million in new financing and hopes to land another $2 million. The Raleigh-based company, which is backed by Intersouth partners, secured the new money a mix of debt and options financing and aims to raise $2 million more, according to an SEC filing on Nov. 13.