Well I just don't see how you can make a profit on these, even assuming you are buying all the hardware used.
The hardware will be new. We expect a ~3 year minimum lifecycle out of the hardware that we buy, and at $20/month, each node would be paid off in 11 months, meaning that we then get 25 months of revenue, not considering dead hardware replacement costs. Which gives away how much we're paying for each node.
Really, if someone produced a cheap 2TB SSD that only did 40MB/s I'd be jumping all over them just to have dense reliable storage
Same here!
Haha, looks like a lot of people are really all over this deal. I for one am really excited to try it out since it has awesome specs for the price, but more importantly, finally a good dedi deal in LA, since I'm in Asia.
Yep, that's kinda our pivot here: low cost dedicated servers for the West Coast/Asian market.
If I pay for drives upfront can I buy them from you? I.e. you'd ship them to me with my data on them. I'd pay reasonable costs and charges in connection with that of course.
We were actually kinda thinking about offering something similar. Buy your drives for their replacement cost and we'll ship them to you for whatever shipping would cost. Not sure if we'd get a lot of interest in that.
I wouldn't need the /29. A single address is enough since it would be a personal server.
It's a bit easier to split servers by /29's than it is by individual addresses, as they can be in their own vlan which helps to ensure that customers don't see eachother's traffic. Plus if we gave only a single address, and then the customer in the future decides that they want more addresses, it's easier to add them to a vlan.
I'd be interested in something with a more powerful CPU though.
Perhaps in a future cycle.
I'd probably want the 1000gb plan, though is that for both inbound and outbound? I want mostly inbound bandwidth, relatively little outbound. The idea with the disk purchase is I want to transfer a few TB of data from my OVH dedis to my own gear.
It would be for both combined inbound and outbound, yes. American datacenters don't seem to be interested in giving free incoming transfer (or I haven't figured out the right people to ask for it).
Using a $150 price point for hard drives, which means we can offer 256gb SSDs. A $150 SATA drive ends up being a 3 TB nowadays, so no need to arbitrarily cheap out and buy a smaller drive.
I've always found it interesting when companies try to "upsell" SSDs in a dedicated server when they're the same price as a standard mechanical drive, just storing less.
Would you provide Software RAID setup -- or do we have to do this over IPMI?
I'd order right away!
Not sure yet.