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Service costs

With public cloud computing you pay only for the computing resources you use or subscribe to. This makes budgeting easier if you understand your supplier’s price structure and you can predict confidently your usage. I will discuss the
price structures of the three main service models below, but, before I do that, here are some more questions to ask your potential providers:

Software as a Service costs

With Software as a Service (SaaS) you usually pay for the applications you use and the users you entitle to use them, and you pay per user per month, although in some cases you have to pay for at least a minimum number (five, for example) of users. Often the SaaS provider will offer a number of editions of their service at different prices, with varying functionality and levels of support – see Figure 5.3 for an example. You also pay for any additional data you store on the system in any given month that exceeds an initial data storage allowance. Now, I was careful to write ‘usually pay’ in the first sentence of this paragraph because you can gain limited access to some SaaS systems for free, which is great for small businesses who can get by very well with these systems until they hire more employees or accumulate a large amount of data – and then they can start paying. I have listed below three popular SaaS applications or application suites that were, at the time of writing, initially free of charge:

Platform as a Service costs

Platform as a Service (PaaS) is a bit more complicated than Software as a Service, but it is often initially free for developers. For example, Google App Engine, at the time of writing, allows applications to use up to 6.5 CPU hours per day and transfer up to a gigabyte a day. Beyond these limits Google App Engine customers are charged for the following
services on a monthly basis (see http://code.google.com/appengine/docs/billing.html for current prices):

The Force.com PaaS has a different pricing structure from Google, ranging from one free, and very limited, user
account to a monthly charge for a fully supported user (see Figure 5.4, and for current prices go to http://www.salesforce.com/), and on a monthly basis they charge for:

Infrastructure as a Service costs

Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) price structures are far more complicated than SaaS or PaaS because of the range
of choices and the amount of control over the infrastructure given to the customer. For example, in Amazon Web
Services customers can be charged on a monthly usage basis for:

The Amazon Web Services (AWS) website provides an online calculator to help you estimate your monthly bill for each of the services they provide, along with examples of typical monthly prices for common use cases such as, for
example, a High Performance Computing (HPC) cluster or a marketing website. See Figure 5.5 for a screenshot of
the AWS calculator (http://calculator.s3.amazonaws.com/calc5.html) taken in January 2010. Other IaaS providers
provide similar tools, including Microsoft who go a step further with their ‘TCO and ROI Calculator’ for Windows Azure
(http://www.microsoft.com/windowsazure/tco/).

 

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