The Philosophy behind Amazon Web Services’ Cloud Strategy
On stage at AWS re:Invent last week, CTO Werner Vogels
discussed Amazon Web Services’ cloud philosophy, increasingly driven by a belief
in building architecture that is cost-aware and designed to optimize economies
of scale so it can do volume transactions at thin margins.
The talk, a first-day keynote with Senior Vice President
Andy Jassy, predicated the group’s belief in a programmable infrastructure that
has more instance types and object storage than any public cloud services
provider. For example, Frederic Lardinois wrote about AWS introduction of a
“Cluster High Memory” instance type that will offer a massive 240 GB of RAM and
two 120 GB SSDs. Jassy also unveiled a “High Storage” instance focused on
storage and will come with 117 GB of RAM and 24 hard drives for a total of 48
terabytes of HDD space.
The two keynotes illustrated AWS’s view on cloud computing,
which differs from enterprise vendors that have focused on selling hardware to
customers for “private clouds.” It was the first time AWS has stated so clearly
how it views cloud computing and its competitors, which they say have been
“cloudwashing” customers into believing that their costly solutions are better
than the rest.
AWS, through its programmable architecture, has built a $1.5
billion business on volume and thin-as-possible margins. The group has dropped
pricing 23 times since 2006, including an approximate 25 percent cut that Jassy
announced during his keynote. He attributed the drop in price to what he called
a virtuous lifecycle.
On Thursday, Vogels showed how a business-driven
infrastructure gives customers their own ability to develop businesses that are
data driven and optimized to make their operations so tight that they can also
operate on low margins.
Vogels explained how an architecture can adapt to changing
business needs based on automated practices that use data to analyze and then
program instances that auto-scale with expected increases or decreases in
demand.
He described it as “cost aware architecture,” meaning that
the infrastructure drives application development, as opposed to the other way
around. Embodied in this is the increasing requirement for the applications to
be controllable, resilient, adaptive and data driven.
Amazon.com started AWS because they needed more
infrastructure in order for the business to scale. They also needed a better
way to handle the fluctuations that would come when they had ups and downs in
web traffic.
Customers will often have to estimate physical storage, for
instance, based on the workloads of virtual machines. It’s a constrained method
that gives little room for scaling without adding more machines that require
manual intervention. Often, it’s purely guesswork.
Vogels reiterated that customers need to stop thinking of
physical resources and focus on automation. He described how AWS has built an
infrastructure that allows customers to build in small decomposable blocks that
can be decoupled from the infrastructure. Vogels used IMDb as an example.
Amazon had to scale the movie site as Amazon traffic increased. If Amazon went
up, IMDb had to go up. After making changes to the architecture, AWS could
loose couple the HTML code on S3 so if Amazon scaled up, IMDb wouldn’t have to.
AWS now offers this idea of hypothesis-driven development
that gives customers a combination of instances, spot instances and reserved
instances to keep the application optimized based upon its workload. Instances
are the standard. Spot instances allow customers to make bids for the best price
possible at the time. A reserved instance is a pay-in-advance service that sets
a price at a lower rate than what the standard instance costs.
Pinterest has adapted its infrastructure to correspond with
traffic loads. Ryan Park, Pinterest’s technical operations lead, said on stage
that they have automated their systems to shut down 20 percent after hours.
This reduces the cost when traffic is less. They use reserved instances for the
standard traffic and then do on-demand and spot instances to handle the elastic
load throughout the day. Since building this cost optimized infrastructure
their costs have gone from $54 per hour to $20 per hour.
Vogels said this in a blog post this week:
The most important concept is that, when you are growing, your cost should grow over the same dimension your revenue is coming in over. For Amazon.com that dimension is number of orders. If orders go up your cost should be allowed to rise as well. Although if you are architected well, you will be able to exploit economies of scale and your cost will rise less than the rise of your revenue. If you are architected correctly for cost-awareness scale becomes your friend.
That sums up the AWS cloud philosophy. It reflects the
group’s past and its future. AWS’s experiences taught the group what services
to offer customers. The group learned early that to succeed, it needed systems
that can adapt to business needs. It’s not about how much capacity a customer
has available. It’s about building an infrastructure for the business and its
natural ups and downs.
Source: Techcrunch
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