Amazon Introduces Bidding For EC2 Compute Time
ryanvm alerts us to Amazon's beta announcement this morning for what it is calling Spot Instances, which represent a name-your-own-price way of using the elastic compute service. Here is Amazon's documentation on the feature.
"For customers with flexibility in when their applications can run, Spot Instances can significantly lower their Amazon EC2 costs. Additionally, Spot Instances can provide access to large amounts of additional capacity for applications with urgent needs." Customers can use the EC2 API to see recent spot prices.
Reminds me of:
Great book. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permutation_city.
if only i needed more cpu power for something..
Last I had heard if you wanted to create more than a couple dozen new VM instances at a time you needed to get custom quotes from Amazon, with this metering in place I assume they have worked out those provisioning problems?
There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
I wonder if amazon overestimated the uptake of EC2 and needs to have a fire-sale to get _some_ income on the investment. They need to have capacity to service new orders but by default this means that they have un-used resources that are costing them more then the unit bring in.
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but their ability to exert lock-in in the medium term is pretty weak
Which is related to their strength, for me. I use them precisely because of the short term availability. We ran a test job just today on their service to test the scalability of a routine. Bought 20 2 core machines for 4 hours for I think $64 or so. I'd have to have at least 4 big multi-core servers lying around idle to have that available for a test bed, best case about $12,000 for the bunch (I've priced them in the last month, this is the best choice I found. That's 4 separate servers in a single 2U chassis. I have several boxes from these guys, they are very solid, are 2/3 the price of Dell, and don't need a blade cabinet.)
I wouldn't use EC2 for long term use, but for short term, or speculative use, it's a pretty good deal. I've found them to be pretty stable and easy to use.
I was taught to respect my elders. The trouble is, it's getting harder and harder to find some.
seems it would be be a brilliant way to marked mobile data bandwith as well: when the cell is not too busy and neither it the upstream link, they can sell it off cheap and people can facebook all they like (while i read /.), and when the traffic heats up i still have my work email going but the web2.0rhea flow is temporarily halted.