Google Compute Engine vs Sungard: What are the differences?
What is Google Compute Engine? Run large-scale workloads on virtual machines hosted on Google's infrastructure. Google Compute Engine is a service that provides virtual machines that run on Google infrastructure. Google Compute Engine offers scale, performance, and value that allows you to easily launch large compute clusters on Google's infrastructure. There are no upfront investments and you can run up to thousands of virtual CPUs on a system that has been designed from the ground up to be fast, and to offer strong consistency of performance.
What is Sungard? Transforming IT environments, ensuring they are resilient and recoverable. Providing mission critical IT solutions for 40 years in business continuity, disaster recovery, cloud, consulting, data center & colocation services.
Google Compute Engine belongs to "Cloud Hosting" category of the tech stack, while Sungard can be primarily classified under "Data Backup".
Some of the features offered by Google Compute Engine are:
- High-performance virtual machines- Compute Engine’s Linux VMs are consistently performant, scalable, highly secure and reliable. Supported distros include Debian and CentOS. You can choose from micro-VMs to large instances.
- Powered by Google’s global network- Create large compute clusters that benefit from strong and consistent cross-machine bandwidth. Connect to machines in other data centers and to other Google services using Google’s private global fiber network.
- (Really) Pay for what you use- Google bills in minute-level increments (with a 10-minute minimum charge), so you don’t pay for unused computing time.
On the other hand, Sungard provides the following key features:
- Improve the availability, security and performance of your business
- Ensure recoverability and optimize Hybrid IT
- Stay compliant with changing regulatory mandates