Yet they call everything they do a Cloud. Not only containers hooked up to EBS.Amazon has EBS.
Yet they call everything they do a Cloud. Not only containers hooked up to EBS.Amazon has EBS.
That's the same with Unlimited everything hosts, they are marketing gimmicks as Joe said above, people think they will get it or that their server / hosting will never go down.You will find very less true cloud service providers. Just labelling the cloud services to most common known services terms will give the boost to the business.
As majority of the world still does not know the true meaning of "cloud". The cloud vps services you are mentioning which are labelled with such low prices are just marketing gimmicks to attract the newbie clients.
A cloud infrastructure should support cloud applications. Cloud applications are designed to be fault tolerant, and a cloud application operator would not want the decreased disk speed and increased pricing that comes with distributing virtual machine disk contents across multiple locations. Instead, operators primarily want to be able to provision and delete instances on the fly to scale up/down the application depending on usage, and also to be able to snapshot instances and upload their own disk images for provisioning.There are some shops that are really close to what a cloud should be:
1- Essentially is all about redundancy
2- and location independent.
If the node crash and the vm continue running without downtime, that is well.. cloud...
If a tsunami hit the DC and the vm continue running from another location without downtime ,, that is .. well.. that cant be more cloud
But real "cloud" if that even exist, we could say extreme redundancy" , doesn't cost 10 dollars per GB RAM and not 20, or 30. It really cost a lot.
Just a thought...
Yes, people can build cloud applications without EBS. Besides, demanding that they have a message saying "yo, this part of our infrastructure is cloud, but this part isn't" is simply ridiculous; people can use any cloud infrastructure without taking advantage of the cloud capabilities, e.g. by only provisioning a single instance.Yet they call everything they do a Cloud. Not only containers hooked up to EBS.
Short of the obvious analogy to rain... um, the concept of 'redundancy' is already a kind of leakage in and of itself. Especially to the extent that data is being mirrored beyond RAID and at multiple locations across the world. It is preemptively leaked in a sense.Why is that ?
Cloud VPS is a "VPS" IN THE CLOUD - so yes it really is CLOUD; by true definition.
However, everyone calls "EVERYTHING" the "CLOUD".
Example: Digital Ocean is a NORMAL VPS (local storage, single hypervisor, etc) but its called "CLOUD" when it isnt.
Cloud VPS is really a virtual server that offers dedicated CPU resources and is is scalable so you can upgrade your VPS as your website grows without any downtime and going through data migration.
Cloud has nothing to do with the reliability of individual VMs. When you're operating a cloud application that scales over thousands of VMs, you expect a few to fail every day.
Real clouds cost a good bit of cash. Offering them for $7/mo would mean financial ruin. Someone will show me a company doing it I suppose.