I missed this: Apparently the OpenSolaris 2008.05 AMI on EC2 has reached a capacity limit. So, while I got Sun’s approval this morning for their OpenSolaris/SXCE.79 on EC2 beta, I don’t get to use OpenSolaris until they add more capacity; SXCE.79 is a nice consolation prize, though.
Archive for the ‘ec2’ tag
Suggested Reading, 6/3/2008, Evening Edition
- SkyNet Lives! (aka EC2 @ SmugMug) – Blog post about how SmugMug uses (and doesn’t use) Amazon Web Services; I found the comment that EC2 Persistent Storage “isn’t performant enough” intriguing – I’ll be interested to see what its performance characteristics are once it’s available to the public. Excerpt from the post: “Let me be very clear here: I really don’t want to operate datacenters anymore despite the fact that we’re pretty good at it. It’s a necessary evil because we’re an Internet company, but our mission is to be the best photo sharing site. We’d rather spend our time giving our customers great service and writing great software rather than managing physical hardware. I’d rather have my awesome Ops team interacting with software remotely for 100% of their duties (and mostly just watching software like SkyNet do its thing). We’ll get there – I’m confident of that – we’re just not there yet.” (Seen at the Amazon Web Services Blog.)
- Rough Type: Microsoft to put “many millions” of servers in cloud
– Nicholas Carr reports on Microsoft’s cloud plans. My thoughts: Does anyone see a latency problem with the following – think of the speed of light in glass, or the AWS Blog post mentioned above and its comments about locating services in the same cloud , or why SmugMug still runs some of its own servers: “We’re taking everything we do at the server level, and saying that we will have a service that mirrors that exactly. The simplest one of those is to say, okay, I can run Exchange on premise, or I can connect up to it as a service. But even at the BizTalk level, we’ll have BizTalk Services. For SQL, we’ll have SQL Server Data Services, and so you can connect up, build the database. It will be hosted in our cloud with the big, big data center, and geo-distributed automatically. This is kind of fascinating because it’s getting us to think about data centers at a scale that never existed before. Literally today we have, in our data center, many hundreds of thousands of servers, and in the future we’ll have many millions of those servers.”
OpenSolaris and EC2: Control Issues, Anyone?
Generally, I’m a fan of Sun Microsystems. For the most part, I like their hardware and their software – and their best products show real innovation and willingness to take risks. I’m also a fan of Amazon’s EC2 product, so the announcement that Sun would be officially bundling OpenSolaris for EC2 was great news. Unfortunately, it seems that after all the hullabaloo, Sun doesn’t really want to make it that easy for you to actually use OpenSolaris on EC2, by managing access to it like a control freak would.
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