Cloud Computing: Amazon Sells Customers On Long-Term Use
Grazed from Information Week. Author: Charles Babcock.
Cloud computing customers tend to view it as a vehicle for absorbing their websites’ or other public-facing applications’ heavy traffic periods. But Amazon appears to be increasingly successful at getting more of them to use it for long-term, steady-state purposes.
The data is skimpy, and Amazon Web Services wouldn’t divulge how much of its business is now based on Reserved Instance versus on-demand servers. On-demand servers are ordered up without prior notice; they start and stop whenever the customer wants. Reserved Instances, available since 2009, are lined up through one- or three-year agreements in exchange for an upfront payment. Reserved Instances don’t have to run continuously for that length of time, although one of the options for purchasing them, heavy utilization, assumes that they run most of the time…


Rackspace’s new OpenStack-powered Cloud Block Storage comes in spinning disk and faster SSD tiers and lets customers mix and match block size with compute instances as needed, says company CTO John Engates. Rackspace continued to roll out pieces of its OpenStack cloud Tuesday with the debut of Cloud Block Storage.