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From the Blogosphere Amazon Releases Virtual Private Cloud Service
Service that makes it possible for customers to create their own logically isolated set of Amazon EC2 instances
By: Alin Irimie
Aug. 27, 2009 05:00 PM
Amazon CTO Werner Vogels published a detailed blog post regarding this service, in which he acknowledges that enterprises tend to find it challenging to transition applications and services to the cloud when they have often invested years of resources and tons of money setting up their own IT infrastructure (datacenters, networks, etc.). He also says ‘private clouds’, which are basically emulations of cloud computing inside private networks, are not true clouds as far as he’s concerned and that Amazon VPC adequately fills the void. What can you do with Amazon VPC: - Create a Virtual Private Cloud and assign an IP address block to the VPC. The address block needs to be CIDR block such that it will be easy for your internal networking to route traffic to and from the VPC instance. These are addresses you own and control, most likely as part of your current datacenter addressing practice. A more detailed, technical outline of the offering can be found on the Amazon developer blog. The Amazon Virtual Private Cloud is currently limited to the EC2 cloud compute service, though Amazon said it will include other web services (e.g. S3) in the future. Pricing, as usual, is based on usage. Related posts:
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