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<title>Phil Dawes Stuff: grid</title>
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<author><name>Phil Dawes</name></author>
<updated>2006-08-25T10:59:00Z</updated>


<entry>
  <title type="html">Amazon get into the virtual computing space</title>
  
  <category term="General" /> 
  <category term="grid" /> 
  <category term="workfriendly" />
  <id>http://phildawes.net/blog/2006/08/25/amazon-get-into-the-virtual-computing-space/</id>
  <updated>2006-08-25T10:59:00Z</updated>
  <published>2006-08-25T10:59:00Z</published>
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<p><a href="http://www.amazon.com/b/ref=sc_fe_l_2/104-9403179-8419167?ie=UTF8&amp;node=201590011&amp;no=3435361&amp;me=A36L942TSJ2AJA">This looks really interesting!</a> -Basically Amazon are offering pay-as-you-go computing. Each instance is equivalent to a physical server with 1.7 GHz Xeon CPU, 1.75 GB RAM, 160 GB of local disk, and 250 Mbps of connectivity. You even get root access. Prices are:</p>

<pre><code>* $0.10 per instance-hour consumed (or part of an hour consumed).
* $0.20 per GB of data transferred outside of Amazon (i.e., Internet traffic).
* $0.15 per GB-Month of Amazon S3 storage used for your images (charged by Amazon S3).
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<p>I haven't spent much time looking at this, but as far as I can see you create an 'image' on a computing instance, and then use web-service APIs to dynamically use it to bring up more instances as demand dictates. Unfortunately I'm too late for the limited beta. bah.</p>

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