Amazon Web Services has officially released its
Elastic
Compute Cloud (EC2) hosted computing service.
The company said today that the service would no longer be considered a beta
product and would be supported by a service level agreement. The SLA will serve
as a commitment from Amazon to keep the service up at a rate of at least 99.95
per cent or allow customers to claim a refund on purchased service credits for
the system.
EC2 allows businesses to run traditional server deployments on a hosted
'cloud' system. Customers pay for the service on a sliding scale according to
the amount of server resources used.
In addition to the SLA, the company has unveiled the first public beta of its
EC2 Windows Server and Microsoft SQL Server services. Both offerings allow users
to run deployments of the Microsoft server systems within the EC2 cloud
computing platform.
"When we launched Amazon EC2 over two years ago, the idea of accessing
computing power over the web was still a novel idea," said EC2 general manager
Peter De Santis.
"We've listened closely to our customers for the past two years and worked
backward from their requirements, adding important new features such as those we
are announcing today."
The addition of SQL and Windows Server support was first announced by the
company in early October. However, what should have been big news for Amazon was
quickly overshadowed by Microsoft when chief executive Steve Ballmer revealed
that the
company
was working on a cloud computing system of its own.
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