Side note, for anyone wondering like I was, the visualization tool is Cloudcraft: https://cloudcraft.co/ . I'd love to have something similar for doing isometric views of any kind of diagramming.
I am not sure I get the point of making it (fake-)3D. Except for all text to be diagonal and me having to tilt my head to read it, and cute pseudo-3D pictures of variously formed boxes, I don't see any advantage. It's still essentially 2D - there's no third dimension I could usefully explore - it's just presented in a visually cute but informationally cluttering way. Is there any advantage to this form of presentation?
It's funny, I came to the comments to specifically complain about that graphic. There are significant disadvantages to the isometric view for that data, and absolutely no advantage that I can see, other than it looks pretty if you're not trying to get information out of it.
I think that Tufte needs to make a resurgence with this generation of designers.
Hah, I think icons are the place isometric views work really well, actually! Lots of room for highly differentiated objects with an isometric view. However, text and interconnections and maps are really not great at these isometric angles. And I do really like the icons used in the figure in the original post, just not the whole.
AWS has sometimes used in their diagrams, so everyone wants it when creating theirs. I work on https://www.lucidchart.com (which has "only" 2D diagrams) and it's a common request.
You're correct that 2D makes for greater readability and information density.
The video is a bit slow because it's meant to be instructional. There are other videos on the same page which show how the model (graph) can be viewed logically instead of isometrically (what we call spatially).
Our marketing is currently geared towards teams, so our pricing starts at 12k USD/yr for a 10 user subscription. We haven't yet rolled out official individual pricing so I don't want to jump the gun here by announcing prematurely, but if you start a free trial and mention you're seeking a single user, we can discuss further via email.
Looks mostly comprehensible to me. A lot of the icons are obvious if you deal with this stuff a lot, like the ELB, Redis icons, and the ones with instance types written on them. Bit too zoomed out to read the small text, though.
Love the visuals. Readability is less than great in some cases. I'd probably model my team's infrastructure this way and keep it as a reference to onboard new members and problem solve.
Is the readability just due to the size that the images get reproduced at? If that's the case, it looks like the text isn't great on the "standard" size people reproduce the graphic in (landing page of your site), but it looks nice inside the editor (second section on your site, very crisp). Optimizing it for size, or scaling up the representation somehow would make this a lot more pleasant to look at for me.