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Cloud Computing Price Comparison

by Mr Kirkland on October 27th, 2009

Apples and Lizards

I’ve just been researching the estimated cost of cloud computing on some of the various providers out there who want to absorb your servers into their clouds.

Doing this research has been like comparing apples to lizards. The providers all have their own way of billing you, and there’s a whole host of extra features offered, some free, some not. To help you on your quest I present some nice tables with the results of my investigations here.

data

I tried taking a fixed monthly budget and seeing what best value I could get for the money as I think this is a fairer and more realistic comparison. I have as far as possible searched for the best deals (e.g. using amazon’s reserved instances and GoGrid’s pre-pay plans).

Price Resource EC2 GoGrid RackSpace VPS.net
$100/Month CPU 3x1GHz 1Xeon 2GHz* 2.8GHz

Ram (GB) 4.2 1 2 1.7

Storage (GB) 480 60 80 70

B/W (GB) 130 0 80 1750

$200/Month CPU 2xDual2Ghz 1Xeon 4Ghz** 6GHz

Ram (GB) 15 1.5 4 3.8

Storage (GB) 1700 90 160 150

B/W (GB) 100 206 80 3750

$500/Month CPU 4xDual2Ghz 3x1Xeon 4x2Ghz* 3×4.8Ghz

Ram (GB) 30 9 8 9

Storage (GB) 3400 420 320 360

B/W (GB) 550 0 500 9000

$1000/Month CPU 8xDual2Ghz 3x3Xeon 2xquadx2Ghz 6×7.2Ghz

Ram (GB) 60 12 16 28

Storage (GB) 6800 520 620 1080

B/W (GB) 1200 1000 1000 27000

* The 2Ghz is actually 1/8th of a 2xquad core 2Ghz machine
* The 4Ghz is actually 1/4th of a 2xquad core 2Ghz machine

Alas GoGrid only displays “Xeon” for the CPU, no further info seems to be divulged.

If the shoe fits

It’s become evident to me that you have to find the best fit for your needs (and future needs) in terms of price and features. It seems Amazon is the cheapest in terms of Memory and CPU, VPS.net by far the best for B/W while GoGrid throws in great freebies such as 100% SLA + Load balancing.

Here’s some quick facts to throw into the mix:

Amazon

  • No persistant storage (you can use EBS or S3 for this at extra cost)
  • No SLA
  • Support costs $100/month or $400/month
  • Lot’s of complementary services (Storage, RDB, Billing etc.)

GoGrid

  • 100% SLA
  • Free Load Balancer
  • Free 24/7 support

Rackspace

VPS.net

  • Free Daily Backups
  • Support $99/month (includes 100% SLA)

Some price comparison tools

Anyway, I’d be interested to hear anyone’s real experiences with hosting services in the cloud.

From → webmastering

10 Comments
  1. Mr Norris permalink

    What application are you considering this for? I stumbled acorss these, that both look brilliant for home use. Zumodrive and Drivesafe. Check them out, love the fact I could access ALL my music anywhere!

  2. Nice summary. It’s good to see users trying to do the apples to oranges (lizards) comparison of pricing, especially since GoGrid is on only provider to do RAM-based pricing (versus CPU). We chose the RAM-based billing model simply because it is a lot simpler to understand (you know how much RAM you have deployed…it’s harder to determine the amount of CPU cycles you might use…)

    We do have a wiki page on the GoGrid site that does some brief comparisons between EC2 & GoGrid: http://wiki.gogrid.com/wiki/index.php/Billing_Model#Server.2FInstance_Price_Comparison

    There is also some details on the Core allotments there. We also have some Technical FAQs that talk about Core bursting available: http://wiki.gogrid.com/wiki/index.php/Frequently_Asked_Questions#Technical_Specifications

    Please be sure to check back with GoGrid over the next month or so as we will have some interesting new options available.

    Thanks,
    Michael Sheehan
    Technology Evangelist for GoGrid

  3. Mr Kirkland permalink

    - Michael thanks for the comment. I was wondering why there was no mention of CPU power!

    - Mitch (Mr Norris), I’m doing a comparison for cloud computing (virtual servers).

  4. Another analysis of cloud computing pricing is present at theCloudTutorial.

  5. Hi, nice post. I also tried to compare some cloud hosting options. You’re right about apples and lizards :) . I tries to compare entry level cloud solutions and cheapest plans(EC2, Rackspace, ReliaCloud, Joyent). So if you’re interested, see http://sevcloud.blogspot.com/2010/05/cloud-hosting-price-comparison.html

    Petr

  6. Alex permalink

    Thanks, good research. I was wondering what the best deal is for less than $10? I’m looking for a scalable cloud for hosting standby (“warm failover”) sites for some of my customers. Just a place to keep a known-good copy of the code and latest database dumps, which can be quickly fired up and scaled to replace a downed/hacked site at another provider. The ideal price point for that would be $10 or less.

  7. Mr Kirkland permalink

    For that price range and application, you’re probably in need of slice host, of the rackspace cloud hosting option

  8. Cloud Computing Comparison permalink

    Mr Kirkland,

    You could use Cloud Hypermarket to compare cloud services very easily.

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