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  2. Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_Elastic_Compute_Cloud

    On Demand EC2 instances are priced per hour. An example of this pricing would be $0.096 per hour for a Linux, m5.large, EC2 instance in the us-east-1 region. Pricing will vary based on the instance type, region, and operating system of the instance. Public on-demand pricing for EC2 can be found on the AWS website.

  3. Amazon Machine Image - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_Machine_Image

    A template for the root volume for the instance (for example, an operating system, an application server, and applications) Launch permissions that control which AWS accounts can use the AMI to launch instances; A block device mapping that specifies the volumes to attach to the instance when it's launched

  4. Amazon S3 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_S3

    Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3) is a service offered by Amazon Web Services (AWS) that provides object storage through a web service interface. [1] [2] Amazon S3 uses the same scalable storage infrastructure that Amazon.com uses to run its e-commerce network. [3]

  5. Amazon Virtual Private Cloud - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_Virtual_Private_Cloud

    AWS VPC is free, with users only paying for the consumption of EC2 resources. However, if users choose to access VPC via a Virtual Private Network (VPN), there is a charge. However, if users choose to access VPC via a Virtual Private Network (VPN), there is a charge.

  6. Amazon Elastic Block Store - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazon_Elastic_Block_Store

    Amazon Elastic Block Store (EBS) provides raw block-level storage that can be attached to Amazon EC2 instances and is used by Amazon Relational Database Service (RDS). [1] It is one of the two block-storage options offered by AWS, with the other being the EC2 Instance Store. [2] Amazon EBS provides a range of options for storage performance and ...

  7. AWS Elastic Beanstalk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/AWS_Elastic_Beanstalk

    AWS Elastic Beanstalk is an orchestration service offered by Amazon Web Services for deploying applications which orchestrates various AWS services, including EC2, S3, Simple Notification Service (SNS), CloudWatch, autoscaling, and Elastic Load Balancers. [2]

  8. Timeline of Amazon Web Services - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Amazon_Web...

    AWS launches Elastic File System (EFS) in production in three AWS regions (us-east-1, us-west-2, and eu-west-1). EFS allows customers to create POSIX-compliant file systems that can be attached to multiple EC2 instances. The file system grows and shrinks as needed and performance scales with storage size.

  9. Infrastructure as a service - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infrastructure_as_a_service

    The US National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) defines infrastructure as a service as: [3]. The capability provided to the consumer is provision processing, storage, networks, as well as other fundamental computing resources where the consumer is able to deploy & run arbitrary software, which can include operating systems and applications.