Why MS Azure sucks a bit less today...
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In reference to this post[^] After calling Microsoft Support and spending a good amount of time explaining what happened, they have reversed the charges and verified that nothing is running on the account any longer. I still haven't figured out howto actually cancel the account yet (but I haven't tried a whole lot). The service still sucks and the concept of cloud computing still sucks for almost all practical purposes...but at least they have a bit of compassion for dumbasses like myself.
Excellent news! M$ needs to understand that developers are their best marketers for Azure - meaning a nearly "free" pricing for development purposes makes sense.
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Excellent news! M$ needs to understand that developers are their best marketers for Azure - meaning a nearly "free" pricing for development purposes makes sense.
Don Burton wrote:
meaning a nearly "free" pricing for development purposes makes sense.
Only when the developers in question are sane rational people and the production prices are published so they can take a calculator and sit down and figure out it's unaffordable and makes no sense for all but the fortune 500 companies.
Yesterday they said today was tomorrow but today they know better. - Poul Anderson
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Don Burton wrote:
meaning a nearly "free" pricing for development purposes makes sense.
Only when the developers in question are sane rational people and the production prices are published so they can take a calculator and sit down and figure out it's unaffordable and makes no sense for all but the fortune 500 companies.
Yesterday they said today was tomorrow but today they know better. - Poul Anderson
John C wrote:
Only when the developers in question are sane rational people and the production prices are published
Granted. Didn't mean that developers should get a blank check only that they should have the "opportunity" to help prove the worth of Azure.
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Don Burton wrote:
meaning a nearly "free" pricing for development purposes makes sense.
Only when the developers in question are sane rational people and the production prices are published so they can take a calculator and sit down and figure out it's unaffordable and makes no sense for all but the fortune 500 companies.
Yesterday they said today was tomorrow but today they know better. - Poul Anderson
John C wrote:
they can take a calculator and sit down and figure out it's unaffordable
You keep on talking about it but have not given any figures yet. All my calculations show that Azure is well worth for the size, bandwidth, fault tolerance and availability. Actually Google AppEngine is better than Azure pricing wise but even then both Azure and Google Appengine beat any comparable web hosting in terms of scaling. And No, Azure makes more sense for small business SaaS providers. Our own Dario Solera is a good example of that: http://amanuens.com/[^]
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John C wrote:
they can take a calculator and sit down and figure out it's unaffordable
You keep on talking about it but have not given any figures yet. All my calculations show that Azure is well worth for the size, bandwidth, fault tolerance and availability. Actually Google AppEngine is better than Azure pricing wise but even then both Azure and Google Appengine beat any comparable web hosting in terms of scaling. And No, Azure makes more sense for small business SaaS providers. Our own Dario Solera is a good example of that: http://amanuens.com/[^]
Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:
All my calculations show that Azure is well worth for the size, bandwidth, fault tolerance and availability
Please share your calculations.
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John C wrote:
they can take a calculator and sit down and figure out it's unaffordable
You keep on talking about it but have not given any figures yet. All my calculations show that Azure is well worth for the size, bandwidth, fault tolerance and availability. Actually Google AppEngine is better than Azure pricing wise but even then both Azure and Google Appengine beat any comparable web hosting in terms of scaling. And No, Azure makes more sense for small business SaaS providers. Our own Dario Solera is a good example of that: http://amanuens.com/[^]
Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:
All my calculations show that Azure is well worth for the size, bandwidth, fault tolerance and availability.
Worth it to what sized end user? Anything is worth it under the right circumstances. My argument is that Azure is *not* targetted at small business end users it's targetted at very large corporate customers. Unless developers here work for said mega corps they are wasting their time with Azure. Sure it may be fun to learn something new but ultimately where's it going? As a developer to small business I'd be doing my end users a huge disservice to move my apps to Azure. Right now they can buy my app once and use it perpetually. To host the same app on Azure I'd have to charge them a significant portion of the one time license cost *every month* to even afford the platform and that profit isn't going in my pocket. No, it just doesn't make much sense except in an extremely narrow market. This of course doesn't even begin to get into the myriad other concerns that are not simple cost related which make business cloud apps a very bad idea for many reasons.
Yesterday they said today was tomorrow but today they know better. - Poul Anderson
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Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:
All my calculations show that Azure is well worth for the size, bandwidth, fault tolerance and availability.
Worth it to what sized end user? Anything is worth it under the right circumstances. My argument is that Azure is *not* targetted at small business end users it's targetted at very large corporate customers. Unless developers here work for said mega corps they are wasting their time with Azure. Sure it may be fun to learn something new but ultimately where's it going? As a developer to small business I'd be doing my end users a huge disservice to move my apps to Azure. Right now they can buy my app once and use it perpetually. To host the same app on Azure I'd have to charge them a significant portion of the one time license cost *every month* to even afford the platform and that profit isn't going in my pocket. No, it just doesn't make much sense except in an extremely narrow market. This of course doesn't even begin to get into the myriad other concerns that are not simple cost related which make business cloud apps a very bad idea for many reasons.
Yesterday they said today was tomorrow but today they know better. - Poul Anderson
As I asked Rama, do you have "numbers" to prove your point? I'd just like to see ROI numbers. It sounds like you've put some effort into this subject. Thanks.
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Rama Krishna Vavilala wrote:
All my calculations show that Azure is well worth for the size, bandwidth, fault tolerance and availability
Please share your calculations.
Yes, I will. For a dedicated machine, custom hosting starts at $150/month. This hosting does not provide any kind of fault and tolerance, has restricted bandwidth requirements. Now consider you are a small business startup, providing SaaS or even trying to test a concept. You have to spend that much amount every month. If your application scales and more people your bandwidth requirements increase, you may need to add more machines. All these will make your hosting price skyrocket and eventually you will be required to have a custom data center which may run in thousands per month. Now with Azure, your cost will be around $80/month and a pretty good fault tolerant system is available to you which is located in Microsoft Data center spread across the world. If you want to increase the capacity you can easily do that by adding more web/worker roles. Further more, you are billed for what you use (i.e. the number of roles). You can increase the roles in peak times and decrease it in slow times (thus saving money). When compared to custom hosting I have calculated that my savings is in thousands. Google App Engine is even better, you pay only for the CPU usage/bandwidth usage of your application (in Azure you pay for the VM usage). So some months your hosting may be free if you do not use anything and some months it will be more if more users hit your site. Your data uses the same Google database, making it even more fault tolerant. The price for bandwidth and CPU are extremely low in case of Google.
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Yes, I will. For a dedicated machine, custom hosting starts at $150/month. This hosting does not provide any kind of fault and tolerance, has restricted bandwidth requirements. Now consider you are a small business startup, providing SaaS or even trying to test a concept. You have to spend that much amount every month. If your application scales and more people your bandwidth requirements increase, you may need to add more machines. All these will make your hosting price skyrocket and eventually you will be required to have a custom data center which may run in thousands per month. Now with Azure, your cost will be around $80/month and a pretty good fault tolerant system is available to you which is located in Microsoft Data center spread across the world. If you want to increase the capacity you can easily do that by adding more web/worker roles. Further more, you are billed for what you use (i.e. the number of roles). You can increase the roles in peak times and decrease it in slow times (thus saving money). When compared to custom hosting I have calculated that my savings is in thousands. Google App Engine is even better, you pay only for the CPU usage/bandwidth usage of your application (in Azure you pay for the VM usage). So some months your hosting may be free if you do not use anything and some months it will be more if more users hit your site. Your data uses the same Google database, making it even more fault tolerant. The price for bandwidth and CPU are extremely low in case of Google.
Thanks Rama! I'm a little unsure about your $80/month figure. Sql Azure Business alone is priced at $99.99/month for 10 gig of space. I get the convenience factor of Azure for Developers/Clients testing apps but I'm still not sold on the production cost advantage. Thanks again for your numbers.
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Thanks Rama! I'm a little unsure about your $80/month figure. Sql Azure Business alone is priced at $99.99/month for 10 gig of space. I get the convenience factor of Azure for Developers/Clients testing apps but I'm still not sold on the production cost advantage. Thanks again for your numbers.
Don Burton wrote:
I get the convenience factor of Azure for Developers/Clients testing apps but I'm still not sold on the production cost advantage.
It's the other way round :) The production costs are what more advantageous. You do not have to worry about any kind of load balancing, fault tolerance systems, bandwidth costs. For high volume websites the bandwidth cost is extremely high if you do self-hosting or go to a dedicated host. For instance, you tube used to pay around $1 million/month on bandwidth alone. It can never gp that high on Azure and Google is even better.
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Don Burton wrote:
I get the convenience factor of Azure for Developers/Clients testing apps but I'm still not sold on the production cost advantage.
It's the other way round :) The production costs are what more advantageous. You do not have to worry about any kind of load balancing, fault tolerance systems, bandwidth costs. For high volume websites the bandwidth cost is extremely high if you do self-hosting or go to a dedicated host. For instance, you tube used to pay around $1 million/month on bandwidth alone. It can never gp that high on Azure and Google is even better.
Sorry. I'm not seeing the production cost advantage. Especially for a SME. Your $80/month number is not all inclusive of what a SME is going to need for a production app.
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Sorry. I'm not seeing the production cost advantage. Especially for a SME. Your $80/month number is not all inclusive of what a SME is going to need for a production app.
These are the values from MS Azure site: Compute = $0.12 / hour Storage = $0.15 / GB stored / month Storage transactions = $0.01 / 10K Data transfers = $0.10 in / $0.15 out / GB - ($0.30 in / $0.45 out / GB in Asia)* When you start out: Your compute cost / month = (0.12 x 24) * (365) / 12 = 87.6 The rest of the costs will be pretty insignificant (storage, transactions. data transfer) (as in my case). So the monthly bill comes out around ($90) (ok, I was about $10 off :) ).
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These are the values from MS Azure site: Compute = $0.12 / hour Storage = $0.15 / GB stored / month Storage transactions = $0.01 / 10K Data transfers = $0.10 in / $0.15 out / GB - ($0.30 in / $0.45 out / GB in Asia)* When you start out: Your compute cost / month = (0.12 x 24) * (365) / 12 = 87.6 The rest of the costs will be pretty insignificant (storage, transactions. data transfer) (as in my case). So the monthly bill comes out around ($90) (ok, I was about $10 off :) ).
You really need to write article on this subject. :) How does the storage cost/month relate to SQL Azure cost of $99.99/month?
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You really need to write article on this subject. :) How does the storage cost/month relate to SQL Azure cost of $99.99/month?
Don Burton wrote:
SQL Azure cost of $99.99/month?
SQL Azure is something which you need if you want to use relational access. It is not as scalable as the Azure blobs and tables, as the framework has no knowledge of how to distribute your data. I think better design is to avoid it unless you want something done quickly using relational model. Personally, I prefer the Google AppEngine (price wise) as you can try out ideas without spending a dime. :)
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Don Burton wrote:
SQL Azure cost of $99.99/month?
SQL Azure is something which you need if you want to use relational access. It is not as scalable as the Azure blobs and tables, as the framework has no knowledge of how to distribute your data. I think better design is to avoid it unless you want something done quickly using relational model. Personally, I prefer the Google AppEngine (price wise) as you can try out ideas without spending a dime. :)
So you're saying avoid SQL Azure? It's not worth the effort and cost?
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So you're saying avoid SQL Azure? It's not worth the effort and cost?
I am saying if it can be avoided, avoid it. Rather, if your data can be modeled using "Azure tables" and "Azure blobs" prefer them over the SQL Azure.
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I am saying if it can be avoided, avoid it. Rather, if your data can be modeled using "Azure tables" and "Azure blobs" prefer them over the SQL Azure.
I cannot see a situation where I could convince a client that a "Flat file in the clouds" is a better model than a Relational SQL Model. I would get laughed out of their office! :omg: There is very good reason why both Amazon and M$ Azure are offering Relational models - clients demand them! Please write an article. I think you make some compelling points and I for one would like see them layed out in an CP article. Thanks Rama.
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I cannot see a situation where I could convince a client that a "Flat file in the clouds" is a better model than a Relational SQL Model. I would get laughed out of their office! :omg: There is very good reason why both Amazon and M$ Azure are offering Relational models - clients demand them! Please write an article. I think you make some compelling points and I for one would like see them layed out in an CP article. Thanks Rama.
Don Burton wrote:
Flat file in the clouds
Nobody said anything about flat files. Azure has concept of tables and blobs. The Azure tables are not relational in the same way as a SQL database but it supports a concept of partition key and a row key. The partition key is a hint to Azure indicating that the data in a particular partition can be stored to a different storage server. By carefully partitioning your data you can make your applications scalable. For instance, if you are developing a application that can be used by a car dealership and you have data from several car dealers. You can partition your data in such a way that each dealer gets his own partition key may be his own server (based on some Azure's algorithm). This, ensures scalability of the application. SQL Azure has no such concept and so you may have to do lot of manual work to distribute the data across servers.
Don Burton wrote:
clients demand them!
I never said clients do not demand them.
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Don Burton wrote:
Flat file in the clouds
Nobody said anything about flat files. Azure has concept of tables and blobs. The Azure tables are not relational in the same way as a SQL database but it supports a concept of partition key and a row key. The partition key is a hint to Azure indicating that the data in a particular partition can be stored to a different storage server. By carefully partitioning your data you can make your applications scalable. For instance, if you are developing a application that can be used by a car dealership and you have data from several car dealers. You can partition your data in such a way that each dealer gets his own partition key may be his own server (based on some Azure's algorithm). This, ensures scalability of the application. SQL Azure has no such concept and so you may have to do lot of manual work to distribute the data across servers.
Don Burton wrote:
clients demand them!
I never said clients do not demand them.
You can call anything you want - compared to the relatonal model they are FLAT FILES (or linked lists). Nobody I know would write a data application (and want to get paid) that follows the model you're recommending. How many client production installs do have in place based on your Azure model?
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You can call anything you want - compared to the relatonal model they are FLAT FILES (or linked lists). Nobody I know would write a data application (and want to get paid) that follows the model you're recommending. How many client production installs do have in place based on your Azure model?
I already gave you reasons why Azure Tables are better than SQL Azure.
Don Burton wrote:
). Nobody I know would write a data application (and want to get paid) that follows the model you're recommending
How about Google: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BigTable[^] and GFS[^]. It follows the same model of Azure Tables.