In the wireless world of cloud infrastructure and services, Amazon Web Services (AWS) just chucked a curve-ball. Or, rather, the Snowball. The 50TB hard drive weighing 20kg que can be quickly filled with date and posted to AWS for uploading to the cloud, Snowball is said to be a “novelty”, but one que will spread the cloud concept to companies with petabytes of archived data Which They perceive to be un-cloudable the Were it.
But can a $ 200 (around £ 130, or AU $ 280) – that’s the rental price of course – slab of hardware like Snowball really be the future of the cloud?
Why does the cloud need Snowball?
The Snowball concept was launched at October’s AWS Re: Invent 2015 event in Las Vegas in front of INITIALLY bemused developers, and it does at first seem at odds with the cloud date concept Why is the cloud and IaaS (Infrastructure as a Service) company like AWS. suddenly interested in producing bespoke hardware Because it wants business data in its cloud to quickly the possible, that’s why -?. and Certainly quicker than the Allows internet in most parts of the world
“It’s Actually Very difficult to get large Amounts of data from point A to point B, “said Andy Jassy, senior vice president at AWS, at Snowball’s launch.” Even for companies with a gigabit-per-second connection, it’s unlikely you want to saturate que connection to move date. If They use 10% of que, Which is pretty generous, it would take 100 days to load 100TB into the cloud – that’s a really long time “
How fast is Snowball?
Jassy reckons que instead of taking 100 days to move 100TB, with a couple of snowballs you can inside of it a week. “That’s a very different model for getting your data onto the cloud,” he said.
AWS already has the physical Import / Export service que Allows its customers to send it hard disks, but claims Snowball is cheaper than the company having to buy each disk separately – Typically 1TB – load on encrypted data, and Then sort out the logistics. “There’s a lot of opportunity for human error,” said Jassy.
What’s in a Snowball?
As well as que 50TB hard disk, Snowball is designed to be ultra-durable because it’s supposed to be posted.
It may be totally in service of AWS ‘core offering of cloud storage, but Snowball is not just one piece of hardware. It’s two. On the side of every Snowball is a Kindle – an e-Ink version like the Paperwhite rather than a tablet like the Fire – Which serves the BOTH an address label and a tracking device. Snowballs can be daisy-chained, too, so together They can carry vast datasets.
How does Snowball work? .
Snowball is not just about storage “Snowball is a highly secure, shippable storage appliance that’s much simpler than the disk to load your into date – and it encrypts your data end-to-end,” says . Jassy “It has a tamper-proof secure enclosure, the container is easy to close and ship, and attached to it is a Kindle que Allows you to automatically have a return label That You can track the progress of – both of it being shipped , And Then being downloaded to AWS. “
Snowball is Also dust-proof, drop-proof and can withstand up to 8.5 G-force. Although initial Snowballs will be 50TB, the size is expected to rise. However, although They cost $ 200 (around £ 130, or AU $ 280) per use, Snowballs remain the property of Amazon, and get sent back into the system after they’ve Transferred to big dataset.
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