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Google Cloud Technology

By the Numbers: How Google Compute Engine Stacks Up To Amazon EC2 76

vu1986 writes "Google launched its EC2 rival, Google Compute Engine, last June, it set some high expectations. Sebastian Standil's team at Scalr put the cloud infrastructure service through its paces — and were pleasantly surprised at what they found. A note about our data: The benchmarks run to collect the data presented here were taken twice a day, over four days, then averaged. When a high variance was observed, we took note of it and present it here as intervals for which 80 percent of observed data points fall into."
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By the Numbers: How Google Compute Engine Stacks Up To Amazon EC2

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  • by Qwavel ( 733416 ) on Sunday March 17, 2013 @11:56AM (#43197143)

    I look forward to seeing Amazon and Google battle each other in providing Linux infrastructure. I know there are many excellent small providers, but no one has really come close to Amazon so far.

  • by White Flame ( 1074973 ) on Sunday March 17, 2013 @11:59AM (#43197165)

    I'd be far less trusting of Google when it comes to running every single analytic it knows of over my data. Amazon's got far less stake in regular data processing, they just want to know about shopping habits.

  • Everything but CPU (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 17, 2013 @12:11PM (#43197223)

    Benchmarks seemed to include everything but actual CPU (GFLOPS, Linpack, whatever) performance.

    I would hazard a guess that pure number-crunchers use less general-purpose farms (and probably farms of graphic coprocessors).

  • Limited preview (Score:5, Insightful)

    by hawguy ( 1600213 ) on Sunday March 17, 2013 @12:20PM (#43197275)

    You mean a cloud service in "limited preview" is much faster than a cloud server open to the public and heavily used?

    There much be some fancy engineering behind the scenes to make a lightly used service run faster than a heavily used one.

    I want to see the benchmarks after GCE is open to the public.

  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Sunday March 17, 2013 @12:24PM (#43197295)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • by BitZtream ( 692029 ) on Sunday March 17, 2013 @12:31PM (#43197337)

    Twice a day over 4 days ... 8 samples ... this is supposed to be useful in some way?

    You should be ashamed of yourself for presenting this data as if it has some sort of meaning at all, let alone a useful one.

    You're going to need a couple orders of magnitude more samples before you even start thinking about being any sort of useful metric.

  • by poetmatt ( 793785 ) on Sunday March 17, 2013 @01:22PM (#43197617) Journal

    paid service shutdown?

    how about picasa.

    google is not trying to hook people, but I still fail to understand why they shut down reader. It added a lot of value.

  • Fast (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 17, 2013 @01:31PM (#43197661)

    It is fast because nobody is using it.

  • by Junta ( 36770 ) on Sunday March 17, 2013 @01:34PM (#43197675)

    google is a company. Companies don't really intrinsicaly about value provided to users as a rule. They care about the revenue they can get from their user activity. Reader porvides value, but Google seemingly doesn't see it as a revenue stream.

    Google isn't doing things out of the goodness of their hearts. A lot of companies give that impression as they ramp up, but inevitably a company will show it's capitalist nature, fail as a business, or both.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 17, 2013 @01:36PM (#43197687)

    You must be new to this world. Industrial espionage is a term that's not derived from science fiction. It's a real thing and it has been for a long time.

    Now imagine Google seeing a new emerging market they want to have a part of. This has happened before, think web mail and social media. Then imagine one of their future competitors is running their stuff on Googles network. Would you really think they could resist the temptation to peek into their stuff?

    Mind you, I'm not trying to bash Google here. Just about any company would do this if they could, hardly any manager could resist the opportunity. Reality is, it'll be very easy for Google to do and they're into in a whole lot of markets and ever-expanding.

  • by Junta ( 36770 ) on Sunday March 17, 2013 @01:39PM (#43197695)

    Currently, EC2 pretty well dominates and stifle the small providers without any help at all.

    In fact, Google, Azure, VMware, IBM, HP and any other large providers coming into prominence may help the small providers. Currently, a lot of people beileve that hosting==EC2. If large competitors change the mindset to have customers realize there is a choice, that realization may have benefits. E.g. if a CIO directs a team to 'take everything to EC2', that's pretty much a guaranteed loss for the small provider. If CIO directs instead 'take everything to a hosting provider', that team then is empowered to allow more providers to compete for the business, even if the CIO mindset was changed only because of the big players.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 17, 2013 @02:10PM (#43197829)

    When it's a company paying for this service, Google will not be looking at their data.

    First, it's bad practice. Companies won't pay if they think their data is available to be read/hacked/distrod/etc.

    Second, if Google is smart, which I'm sure they are, the data won't even be in a format that google is able to decrypt. [wikipedia.org] They don't want to be knowingly storing potentially illegal things, so they will keep it in a format that they can't access without the client's private keys.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday March 17, 2013 @03:03PM (#43198055)

    Why the outright dismissal? You can show with high confidence that elephants are heavier than ants with 8 samples, so 8 samples is certainly sufficient in some situations -- you have to look at the specifics.

  • by thrillseeker ( 518224 ) on Sunday March 17, 2013 @05:11PM (#43198707)
    Do you think AWS will continue if it's eventually found to be nonprofitable?
  • Re:Limited preview (Score:5, Insightful)

    by styrotech ( 136124 ) on Sunday March 17, 2013 @06:03PM (#43198957)

    I find it somewhat ironic that Microsoft will support Linux on its IaaS platform before Google will support Windows on theirs.

    Why is that ironic? The difficulty/pain for each of them to support the "other" OS isn't the same.

    Linux is easier for cloud providers. eg no license tracking, billing or activation type stuff (for most distros at least) to worry about, small Linux server instances require less resources than Windows, just a bunch of files to deploy - no installation processes, instance specific UUIDs etc

    Windows is harder (for everyone but MS) for the opposite reasons.

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