Amazon Web Service is launching a new web service tonight called S3 – which stands for âSimple Storage Serviceâ?. It is a storage service backend for developers that offers âa highly scalable, reliable, and low-latency data storage infrastructure at very low costsâ?.
Until now, a sophisticated and scalable data storage infrastructure like Amazonâs has been beyond the reach of small developers. Amazon S3 enables any developer to leverage Amazonâs own benefits of massive scale with no up-front investment or performance compromises. Developers are now free to innovate knowing that no matter how successful their businesses become, it will be inexpensive and simple to ensure their data is quickly accessible, always available, and secure.
Here are the facts: This is a web service, and so Amazon is not releasing a customer facing service. They are offering standards-based REST and SOAP web services interfaces for developers. Entire classes of companies can be built on S3 that would not have been possible before due to infrastructure costs for the developer.
Virtually any file type is allowed, up to 5 GB. Files may be set as public, shared or private and will have a unique URL.
Pricing is cheaper than anything else Iâve seen: $0.15 per GB of storage per month, and $0.20 for each GB of data transferred up or downstream. This translates to $15 per month for 100 GB of storage, net of any transfer fees (to move that much data on to S3 would be a one time cost of $20). These prices are going to be significantly below the development and ongoing costs for small or medium sized storage projects – meaning a lot of the front end services Iâve previously profiled will be much better off moving their entire back end to S3.