{"id":8,"date":"2008-06-12T12:44:04","date_gmt":"2008-06-12T17:44:04","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/webadminblog.com\/?p=8"},"modified":"2008-06-12T13:16:50","modified_gmt":"2008-06-12T18:16:50","slug":"scalr-project-and-aws","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.webadminblog.com\/index.php\/2008\/06\/12\/scalr-project-and-aws\/","title":{"rendered":"Scalr project and AWS"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>http:\/\/code.google.com\/p\/scalr\/<\/p>\n<p>For those of us getting into amazon&#8217;s Elastic Compute Cloud (ec2), this is a really cool idea.\u00a0 The idea is that your load grows and a new node is ready to handle additional capacity.\u00a0 Once load lessens, boxes are turned off.\u00a0 Integrating this with box stats, response times, monitoring per service makes sense.<\/p>\n<p>I wanted everyone to be thinking of the consumable computing model.\u00a0 Pay as you go for what you use is really attractive.\u00a0 No more do you have to have 10 boxes in your www cluster all day long if your spike is only during 8am to 3pm.\u00a0\u00a0 Now you can run the 10 boxes during those times and use less boxes during non peak times&#8230;\u00a0 Pretty cool.\u00a0 And cheap!<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>http:\/\/code.google.com\/p\/scalr\/ For those of us getting into amazon&#8217;s Elastic Compute Cloud (ec2), this is a really cool idea.\u00a0 The idea is that your load grows and a new node is ready to handle additional capacity.\u00a0 Once load lessens, boxes are turned off.\u00a0 Integrating this with box stats, response times, monitoring per service makes sense. 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