AWS Price Reductions January 2020

Voiced by Amazon Polly
CloudEndure

Cloud Endure Disaster Recovery.

AWS has recently announced what amounts to an 80% price drop of their Cloud Endure disaster recovery software, used for replicating on premise workloads to the cloud for DR purposes. Prior to the price, drop, the list price for Cloud Endure was $45 -$99 per server per month, depending on number of servers and term commitment.  The recent announcement has converted Cloud Endure to ‘on demand’ pricing of $0.028 per server per hour, which equates to around $20 per month.  This price is comparable with Azure Site Recovery, which is priced at $25 per server per month, so it’s likely that this has influenced the AWS pricing strategy.

Of course it’s in AWS’ best interest to get as many customers using Cloud Endure as possible, as replicated workloads drive AWS consumption revenues.  Cloud Endure is also used for migrating to AWS, where AWS offer the software free of charge for 3 months when migrating workloads to AWS.  If you’re using Cloud Endure for DR to AWS, then in effect your migration is already part way done, so AWS will be keen to convert those DR environments to production to drive further increases in consumption revenue.

Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service

Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS).

AWS also announced a 50% price reduction for their Elastic Kubernetes Service (EKS).  The service is now priced at $0.10 per hour per Kubernetes cluster.  This will not reduce the cost of an entire Kubernetes cluster, as you will still pay for EC2 resources consumed such as instances and EBS volumes, for which the prices have remained static for the time being.

This signals a container price war between Amazon, Microsoft and K8s creator Google, and shows that despite Amazon preferring to push their own Elastic Container Service (ECS) they are prepared to compete in the highly competitive Kubernetes space.

If you’re looking for other ways to reduce the cost of your AWS deployment, then Logicata’s AWS Cost Management service could help you reduce your overall AWS running costs by 30%.

You Might Be Also Interested In These...

Approved certificate medal icon - AWS reliability

AWS Reliability – A Core Pillar of Your Architecture

In this post I’m going to give an overview of the AWS Well-Architected Framework, then I’ll do a deep dive on the Reliability pillar—one of the five core pillars that should underpin your AWS architecture. An Overview of the AWS Well-Architected Framework The AWS Well-Architected Framework comprises five pillars. Designed by AWS, this series of best […]

View Post
Managed Cassandra

Why Should you Care About Amazon Keyspaces (Managed Apache Cassandra Service)?

**Updated 24th April 2020 when Amazon Managed Apache Cassandra Service went GA as Amazon Keyspaces** Last week at re:Invent 2019, AWS CEO Andy Jassy announced the launch of the preview for the new Amazon Managed Apache Cassandra service (launched in GA as Amazon Keyspaces).  But what exactly is it, and why should you care?   Apache Cassandra […]

View Post
VMware Cloud on AWS

What’s All the Fuss About VMware Cloud on AWS?

VMware Cloud on AWS has been in the market for over 2 years now, but what exactly is it, and why might a business consider using VMware Cloud on AWS rather than simply migrating all workloads directly to AWS? Let’s take a closer look at VMware Cloud on AWS and try to answer this question. […]

View Post
ebook featured image

5 Steps to a Successful

AWS Migration

DOWNLOAD FREE EBOOK