Amazon S3 changes prices
Effective June 1, 2007, Amazon S3 service will change it’s pricing model, decreasing the bandwidth cost, and introducing charge for PUT/GET operations.
New bandwidth price (effective June 1, 2007)
$0.10 per GB - all data uploaded
$0.18 per GB - first 10 TB / month data downloaded
$0.16 per GB - next 40 TB / month data downloaded
$0.13 per GB - data downloaded / month over 50 TB
Data transferred between Amazon S3 and Amazon EC2 will remain free of charge
New request-based price (effective June 1, 2007)
$0.01 per 1,000 PUT or LIST requests
$0.01 per 10,000 GET and all other requests*
* No charge for delete requests
Those are good and bad news. For those who host their web-site or small images to offset the bandwidth costs from their shared hosting, that is bad; for big guys who host video and photos, that is good.
If you think about it and read the Amazon S3 newsletter, you can clearly say that they are just trying to reduce the amount of small file hosting, because it stresses their system more then serving big files (and that’s try, small files require more connections/second, thus more CPU, if KeepALive is not enabled).
1) Small Guy usage pattern:
Average Visits per moth: 100,000
Average files per visit: 50 (html and images)
Average Gb per visit: 0.0001 (100,000Kb)
Total GETs: 5,000,000
Total BW used per month: 10Gb
New S3 cost: $6.80
Old S3 cost: $2.00
As you can see, the total cost is x3 time higher now then if we just pay $0.2/Gb, and not $0.18/Gb plus $0.01/10,000GETs. Now, if your site gets popular and you get 2,000,000 unique visitors per month then with the new pricing you would pay about $135 and with the old pricing you would pay only $60. Sad, isn’t it?
2) Big Guy usage pattern:
Average Visits per moth: 2,500,000
Average files per visit: 50 (html and images) + 3 videos
Average Gb per visit: 0.0001 (100,000Kb) + 0.09 (90 Mb, avg video is 30Mb)
Total GETs: 132,500,000
Total BW used per month: ~687,500 Tb (now $0.13/Gb)
New S3 cost: ~$90,000
Old S3 cost: ~$138,000
The Big Guy saves almost 50% on total costs, which is sweet.
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Filed under: Enterprises, Amazon on May 1st, 2007; 1 Views
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