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	<title>Comments on: Amazon EC2 is too expensive for startups</title>
	<link>http://dawelbeit.info/2008/12/24/amazon-ec2-is-too-expensive-for-startups/</link>
	<description>Rich Internet Applications design methodologies</description>
	<pubDate>Mon, 06 Feb 2012 09:34:46 +0000</pubDate>
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		<title>By: Spike Washburn</title>
		<link>http://dawelbeit.info/2008/12/24/amazon-ec2-is-too-expensive-for-startups/#comment-343</link>
		<author>Spike Washburn</author>
		<pubDate>Tue, 06 Jan 2009 05:47:05 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid>http://dawelbeit.info/2008/12/24/amazon-ec2-is-too-expensive-for-startups/#comment-343</guid>
		<description>Stax is free during the beta, but we still believe that we can offer options for bringing monthly charges for EC2 inline with standard hosting by taking advantage of application elasticity.  

To get an application deployed on EC2 24x7, you need to allocate a full EC2 server for the month, which will cost you $70 at a minimum.  However, with an elastic platform like Stax, your Java applications can be deployed for 24x7 operations, in a way that allows your application to only use a portion of a server during low-use hours, or none at all during completely idle periods.

If your application load is always steady-state, cloud elasticity won't help you much, but if it has peak/non-peak load variation, it could dramatically reduce your costs since you won't need to pay for a fully dedicated server all the time, which offering you the flexibility of elastic scalability as your load grows overtime.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Stax is free during the beta, but we still believe that we can offer options for bringing monthly charges for EC2 inline with standard hosting by taking advantage of application elasticity.  </p>
<p>To get an application deployed on EC2 24&#215;7, you need to allocate a full EC2 server for the month, which will cost you $70 at a minimum.  However, with an elastic platform like Stax, your Java applications can be deployed for 24&#215;7 operations, in a way that allows your application to only use a portion of a server during low-use hours, or none at all during completely idle periods.</p>
<p>If your application load is always steady-state, cloud elasticity won&#8217;t help you much, but if it has peak/non-peak load variation, it could dramatically reduce your costs since you won&#8217;t need to pay for a fully dedicated server all the time, which offering you the flexibility of elastic scalability as your load grows overtime.</p>
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