All of these services share the same basic theme:
"We can do this server hardware stuff much better than you. So why don't you focus on the software, and we'll do the rest."
How much? Pretty damn cheap. For example, here is their pricing for S3:
- Pay only for what you use. There is no minimum fee, and no start-up cost.
- $0.15 per GB-Month of storage used.
- $0.20 per GB of data transferred.
So what can you do with it? That's up to the developer. There are several free and open source applications that provide slick interfaces to S3. I'm using JungleDisk. It's an active project with binaries for Windows, Linux, and Mac OSX. You give JungleDisk your S3 account information, and it gives you a file system that you can mount as a drive. The virtual file system JungleDisk provides is only available to your local machine, which is a little restricting, but there are ways around that.
Now that no one is still reading, here's my million dollar idea:
S3 + JungleDisk + Linux + Samba + Hacked Router = the perfect network storage/backup appliance.
- Install Linux on a router. Linksys seem to play nice with Linux.
- Install JungleDisk on the router.
- Point the JungleDisk instance to your S3 account.
- Install Samba on the router and use it to share the JungleDisk mount point.
- Enjoy your worry-free network storage appliance.
So why spend several hundred dollars on a networked storage appliance with limited capacity, when you can have the Infinite Storability Drive from Sparrowlegs Systems Inc.
Tax on people who order two of the same book: $13.29
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