Mike Culver from Amazon Web Services and Shuki Lehavi talk about Web Scale Computing. Yet another Amazon session.
Mike starts with some graphics from Alex with traffic from aol.com, flickr.com and fotolog.net and youtube.com, where the last two gain a tremendous market share on the whole web traffic as a basis for saying: If you an idea like these, you need to thing about the infrastructure to run this.
Ideas cost Money. Amazon eliminates the fixed cost in the equation. Pay for what you get.
Slide with a list of Amazon’s customers.
Moves on to S3:
Amazon S3 is… simple.
- Data storage in the cloud
- Web-service interface
- No set-up fee, no monthly minmum
- Storage: 0.15 per GB/month
- Data transfer: 0.20 GB to transfer data
- Private and public storage
- Each object up to 5GB in size
Then describes EC2, Amazon’s computing platform.
Shuki takes on to speak about gumiyo.com and their experience with EC2 and S3.
First describes gumiyo.com’s business and features. They provide RSS feeds and Webservices APIs. This is not a “Hello world” 3 pages application, it’s a complex website.
Decision factors to move to Amazon:
Strategic
- On-Deman capacity
- Operational Noise Reduction
- Complete data center outsourcing
Tactical
- The world’s best data center at $70 per machine per month
- No fixed cost and total variable cost
- Endless storage
They moved both the developing, staging & QA and production environments to Amazon. gumiyo.com also uses S3 for storage.
Gumiyo’s Arquitecture is then shown. Tomcar, apache, multi-node tomcat envs, mysql, Fedora core 6, s3 tools and Apache/Mysql. Java SE 6.0, Java EE 5.0, JSP 2.0 front-end and Spring 2.0 with Hibernate 3.2.
Website page load time goes from 90ms to 450ms. Shuki finishes by saying that their experience with EC2 and S3 has been nothing but great and they to invest even further on it.
Mike moves on and talks a bit about Mechanical Turk and shows somes examples.
English, Tech stuff, eTech2007
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