Amazon Introduces Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC)

Amazon just announced the limited beta of Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (Amazon VPC), a secure and seamless bridge between existing IT infrastructures and the AWS cloud. Amazon VPC enables us to connect our existing infrastructure to a set of isolated AWS compute resources via a Virtual Private Network (VPN) connection.

“Amazon VPC enables you to use your own isolated resources within the AWS cloud, and then connect those resources directly to your own datacenter using industry-standard encrypted IPsec VPN connections. With Amazon VPC, you can:

  • Create a Virtual Private Cloud on AWS’s scalable infrastructure, and specify its private IP address range from any block you choose.
  • Divide your VPC’s private IP address range into one or more subnets in a manner convenient for managing applications and services you run in your VPC.
  • Bridge together your VPC and your IT infrastructure via an encrypted VPN connection.
  • Add AWS resources, such as Amazon EC2 instances, to your VPC.
  • Route traffic between your VPC and the Internet over the VPN connection so that it can be examined by your existing security and networking assets before heading to the public Internet.
  • Extend your existing security and management policies within your IT infrastructure to your VPC as if they were running within your infrastructure.”

Besides the regular ec2 prices, we will have to pay for the VPN connection ($0.05 per VPN Connection-hour) and for the data transfer using the VPN tunnel ($0.10 per GB IN – and starting with $0.17 per GB OUT).

This is a great new service from Amazon that takes the cloud computing offerings to a new level. And this just when major competitors thought they were gaining on Amazon with their offerings, Amazon continues to innovate and launch great new services like this one ;) .

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Cloud Slam 09 – the 1st Virtual Conference on Cloud Computing

Between 20-24 April 2009 I attended to CloudSlam09, the 1st annual virtual conference on cloud computing. This was a global event, using the webex technology, covering latest trends and innovations in the world of cloud computing. Being a virtual event it allowed me to easily attend and listen to several keynotes and talks from the comfort of my home/work office. Obviously this is a huge advantage as not so many people can leave their jobs for 1 week to go at such events. This was a great idea for such an event and a perfect match for the topic.

Besides the obvious advantages of a virtual event, I would like to outline also some disadvantages: besides a rather poor sound quality for some speakers, the biggest minus for me was the inability to focus on a single talk uninterrupted. This because, being actually at work I had to deal with all the usual stuff that I have to do normally (the ones called emergencies). Being on a real event would imply other type of ‘noise’ but anyway ;) .

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Amazon EC2 Reserved Instances

Amazon just announced “reserved instances”, guaranteeing uptime and a price reduction if customers commit to Amazon’s cloud solution for a year or more.

“We’ve learned that some of our customers have needs which aren’t addressed by the spot pricing model. For example, some of them were looking for even lower prices, and were willing to make a commitment ahead of time in order to achieve this. Also, quite a few customers actually told us something even more interesting: they were interested in using EC2 but needed to make sure that we would have a substantial number of instances available to them at any time in order for them to use EC2 in a DR (Disaster Recovery) scenario. In a scenario like this, you can’t simply hope that your facility has sufficient capacity to accommodate your spot needs; you need to secure a firm resource commitment ahead of time.”

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Amazon EC2 European Cloud

Amazon just extended its Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) to Europe. S3 has bee available for Europe for about one year, and now we can also run EC2 instances in Europe to achieve lower latencies with EU locations. The new EU region called eu-west-1.ec2.amazonaws.com is completely isolated from the US region (us-east-1.ec2.amazonaws.com) to achieve the greatest possible failure independence and stability. This means that resources found on the US region (like ami’s, ssh keypairs, etc.) are not available to the EU region and will need to be created (or copied/mirrored) here also.

“With today’s launch, you can take advantage of the latest features for Amazon EC2 including multiple Availability Zones, Elastic IP addresses, and Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS). In the near future, Amazon EC2 will also add support for Windows Server and SQL Server in the EU which is a new feature that was recently introduced on Amazon EC2 in the U.S.”

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RightScale secures $13M in second round venture funding

Cloud computing management software RightScale secured $13 million in second round venture funding (after first round $4.5 million back in April).

Michael Crandell, CEO of RightScale, commented: “Over the next five years, spending on IT cloud services is expected to grow almost threefold, reaching $42 billion by 2012, according to industry research firm IDC. Specializing from its inception exclusively on cloud computing technology, RightScale is well positioned to maintain its leadership position as this industry matures. The company has two years of real-world cloud computing experience and thousands of live deployments. Over 200,000 servers have been successfully launched using the RightScale cloud management platform.”

Full Press Release: http://www.rightscale.com/news_events/press_releases/2008/08december2008.php

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Amazon announces its own content delivery network: CloudFront

Today Amazon announced the public beta of Amazon CloudFront, their AWS service for content delivery. This is the service that many users of Amazon S3 (Simple Storage Service) have been waiting for a long time. Even if S3 was never a ‘real’ CDN (content delivery network) it was used by many sites to serve static content. The main limitation of this approach was that it had no geographical awareness as content delivery networks usually have; the fact that S3 is highly scalable and well priced made this solution acceptable on S3.

CloudFront is the answer to all users’ requests about using S3 as a CDN, delivering the content using a global network of 14 edge locations. CloudFront uses S3 to store the original file, and caches copies of the content close to end users locations, lowering latency when they download the objects.

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Rackspace buys Slicehost and Jungle Disk

Rackspace announced today that it has agreed to buy Slicehost and Jungle Disk for a total of $18 million. This move is supposed to improve its Mosso cloud offerings to better compete with Amazon Web Services.

Slicehost is a leader in Xen-based virtual machine hosting with more than 15,000 “slices” online today. Jungle Disk offers reliable cloud storage solutions that allow users to easily share an unlimited amount of cloud storage between multiple users through a secure, mountable network drive and automatic backup.

http://ir.rackspace.com/phoenix.zhtml?c=221673&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1215812&highlight=

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