The price war among major cloud providers continues, with Amazon Web Services announcing Wednesday that it is lowering the prices of a number of its cloud services, one day after Google slashed prices.
Amazon Web Services Senior Vice President Andy Jassy downplayed any idea that the price cuts were competitive in nature, however.
The round of price cuts, which take effect Tuesday, will be the 42nd for the company since its launch eight years ago, he said.
“Lowering prices is not new for us. It is something we do on a regular basis. Whenever we can take costs out of our own cost structure, we give them back to our customers in the form of lower prices. We should expect us to continue to do this periodically,” Jassy said, speaking Wednesday at the AWS Summit in San Francisco.
Nonetheless, the news comes a day after competing cloud service provider Google announced price cuts, citing the plummeting costs of hardware.
The price of AWS’ Simple Storage Service (S3) is being reduced, on average, by 51 percent. The company’s Elastic Cloud Compute (EC2) has been reduced by 30 percent to 40 percent for the latest generation of compute nodes. AWS’ Relational Database Service (RDS) has been cut by 28 percent, on average. ElastiCache service has been reduced by 34 percent on average and Elastic mapReduce has been lowered by 27 percent to 61 percent.
On Tuesday, Google announced Google Compute Engine (GCE) would now cost, on average, 32 percent less. Google Storage has been cut, on average, by 68 percent. Google BigQuery on-demand analysis services were reduced, price-wise, by up to 85 percent.
While Jassy downplayed any competitive price pressures from Google, Microsoft Azure or an increasing number of other cloud providers, he did take the opportunity to make the case of using public clouds over private clouds, in which an organisation sets up an in-house cloud service for its operations.
The continual cloud price cuts make it hard to justify continuing to run in-house operations, which would be far more expensive, both in terms of hardware costs and maintenance costs, Jassy argued.
Jassy cited a number of enterprises and Internet services that have moved operations to the AWS cloud, including Nintendo, Netflix, AirBnB, NASA, Pinterest and ERP (enterprise resource planning) service provider Infor, which is shifting many of its services over to AWS.
“Friends don’t let friends build data centres,” Infor CEO Charles Phillips said in his presentation during the keynote.
For the U.S., the European Union and Asia-Pacific customers using the Singapore data centre, S3 storage will begin at US$0.03 per gigabyte per month, and $0.024 per gigabyte per month for reduced availability. Currently, AWS S3 storage for these regions cost $0.094 per gigabyte per month and $0.075 per gigabyte per month.
The new S3 prices are slightly higher for other Asia-Pacific data centres and for South American customers. The price drops through several tier levels depending on how much is stored.
By way of comparison, Google now offers Cloud Storage at $0.026 cents per gigabyte per month, and $0.020 cents per gigabyte per month for reduced availability, regardless of the amount of data stored.
With AWS EC2, a m3.medium Linux compute instance run from the company’s northern Virginia data center, with 1 virtual CPU and 3.75 gibibytes (a gibibyte is a binary multiple of a byte), will cost $0.07 per hour starting Tuesday. The new prices for accessing GCE in California and other parts of the world will be slightly higher.
Until 1st April, that same m3.medium setup will cost $0.113 per hour.
For the AWS RDS service, a single medium instance of MySQL, known as a db.m3.medium, will cost $0.095 per hour, when run from the northern Virginia Amazon data centre. Currently, it costs $0.150 per hour.
At the summit, AWS also announced a number of new technologies. Amazon WorkSpaces, a virtual desktop service announced at the AWS re:Invent conference last November, is now generally available. It also has launched new functionality that will allow an organisation to establish a peering connection between two virtual private clouds within AWS.
AWS also introduced a number of new compute types for EC2.
The company is refreshing the HS1 line of storage-intensive EC2 nodes. The new HS1 instances, which will debut within a few weeks, will support twice as many virtual CPU threads and will also boost the throughput from 2.6Gbps to 3.6Gbps. The company is also introduced a line of memory-intensive EC2 node, called R3s. This line will feature an 8-to-1 ratio of memory to CPU, allowing up to 244GB of RAM per instance.