I didn’t get a chance to post this before, but it’s a pretty significant story, I think. Fanzter’s Facebook app, OneThing, leverages EC2 and S3. You can hit the link below or check out TechCrunch’s take.
Latest Featured Video
sujal
08/28/2008
Found this via Brea Grant’s blog. It’s a good song, and the rest of the album is pretty good. You can get the album, Re-arrange Us, on Amazon.com’s MP3 store. No DRM, just plain, high quality MP3 files.
(PS. Don’t forget to watch Brea Grant on Heroes in a few weeks, and check out other books and music she likes over at Coolspotters. And, no, I’ve got no connection to her, business or otherwise. Just a fan since I saw her on Friday Night Lights.)
Categories: Featured Video, Music
11:53 am | leave a comment
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February 2nd, 2008 at 12:20 pm
Regarding bandwidth, it doesn’t surprise me much. I use JungleDisk, which is a client to S3, to back up my photos. That’s about 1GB/quarter in new data. How much e-commerce does it take to generate that much data traffic?
Me:
1 GB/quarter
10 MB/day
Commerce:
Let’s say 100K per visit, given the pretty pictures.
So 100 people need to shop at Amazon to equate to the bandwidth of one traveling dork with an old digital camera.
Metric well-chosen.
February 2nd, 2008 at 1:45 pm
It’s not so much the absolute bandwidth, but the variety of businesses being supported by these services. They are providing infrastructure for a LOT of companies, not the least of which is my own employer.
Also, they’ve inspired a host (no pun intended) of other companies that build either the same service or similar grid style infrastructure.
Sujal
PS. 1GB a quarter in pictures is a LOT… I suspect you’re at the high end of that range.. that’s gotta be about 200 pictures every 3 months? If I’m doing the math right.
February 2nd, 2008 at 1:46 pm
PS. Amazon page weight is around 100K per page without the externals, all of which aren’t hosted at Amazon anyway (they’re using Akamai as a CDN).
February 3rd, 2008 at 12:11 pm
Sujal, I definitely agree that Amazon web services is a fantastic platform. I’m very happy to see it taking off. When I was with a startup in 1997, we lamented the high cost of servers, and wished that we could just rent a little computing power from someone with a huge server farm, like the local utility.
As a contrarian pest, I can’t help but point out when someone is choosing convenient statistics.
200 is on the low end…we have been traveling very well the last 3-4 years, and I shoot about 30-50 keepers (100 shots total) per day in a new city/region.