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All I want for Christmas is computing power

Amazon.com Inc. is making a big bet, but it's not on selling books, CDs or holiday gifts. Instead, it wants to sell you all the processing power you can eat. Rather than competing with your local bookstore, it's taking on the likes of IBM, Hewlett-Packard Co. and Sun Microsystems Inc.

Amazon's recently released Elastic Compute Cloud (which it calls EC2 and is still in beta) for the first time brings to the masses grid computing and utility computing --- the ability to buy server power in the same way you now buy electricity or water.

In essence, you pay 10 cents per virtual server per hour, plus bandwidth costs, and you do with that power whatever you want. While it's not quite as simple as turning on your water tap, it's the same basic idea. You pay only for the processing power you use, and how much you use is entirely in your control.

IBM, HP and Sun already sell computing power on demand, but they sell primarily to large enterprises, and on a very big scale. Amazon, on the other hand, sells to small and medium-sized businesses, as well as to large enterprises, and does it via unique technology that builds on previously released Amazon middleware services.

Not everyone agrees that the same company that offers 40 percent off best-sellers should try to become a big-time IT provider. But Amazon has always believed that books were only an entree into selling far more sophisticated goods and services. Can it succeed? We'll take a look inside the technology, then talk to the Amazon executives in charge of the service, which may give some hint as to whether it will pay off.

How it works

Let's start off with a look at what the system is, how it works, and a brief history of it. EC2 is not, in fact, the first of this type of service that Amazon has launched; it's an outgrowth of an existing platform called Amazon Web Services. Back in March of 2006, Amazon released its Simple Storage Service (S3), online metered storage that costs 15 cents per gigabyte per month of storage used, plus 20 cents per gigabyte of data transferred. It uses standard REST and SOAP interfaces.

In July of 2006, Amazon followed on with the Simple Queuing Service (SQS), a scalable hosted queue that stores messages as they travel between computers. It's designed to let developers easily move data between distributed application components, while ensuring that messages aren't lost.

It can be used to transfer messages even when individual components aren't currently available --- once a component is available, it's sent to it from the queue. Again, it's a metered model; costs are 10 cents per 1,000 messages sent, and 20 cents per gigabyte of data transferred. Like S3, it uses Representational State Transfer and Simple Object Access Protocol interfaces.

In both instances, the technology wasn't developed from scratch. Instead, Amazon used its own internal infrastructure and technologies and made them available to developers.

EC2 continues in that tradition. Put in the simplest terms, Amazon rents out virtual servers, which it called "instances," from its data centers, which are grids. Each instance has the approximate power of a server with a 1.7Ghz Xeon processor, 1.75GB of RAM, a 160GB hard drive, and a 250M bit/sec. Internet connection which can communicate in bursts of up to 1G bit/sec.

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