|
|
|
|
|
by nirvdrum
4765 days ago
|
|
I know you were asking for effect, but of course they do and it's EC2. That's why they have a heavy reservation pricing tier, which only makes sense for 24/7/365 (you pay for hours even if you don't use them). But, it's fun to point at "elastic" and tell people they're "doing it wrong" because they don't take a name chosen 7 years ago literally. As if somehow the service (called EC2 virtually everywhere -- not Elastic Cloud Compute) could never evolve beyond that initial use case. Incidentally, the "elastic" in EBS must have a different meaning because one of its primary selling points is that it's persistent storage. |
|
It's not an arbitrary name, elasticity is a defining concept of "cloud".
>As if somehow the service (called EC2 virtually everywhere -- not Elastic Cloud Compute) could never evolve beyond that initial use case.
EC2 is one tool. There are other tools in the Amazon box for other use cases [0] and other boxes from other providers entirely.
>Incidentally, the "elastic" in EBS must have a different meaning because one of its primary selling points is that it's persistent storage.
It's elastic because you can allocate and deallocate rapidly and pay only for what's allocated at a given time.
0: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=5819017