Amazon EC2 vs Linode

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Amazon EC2 vs Linode: What are the differences?

Introduction:

In this article, we will discuss the key differences between Amazon EC2 and Linode. Both Amazon EC2 and Linode are popular cloud hosting services that offer virtual servers, but they have some distinct differences that potential users should consider. Let's explore these differences in more detail.

  1. Pricing: One significant difference between Amazon EC2 and Linode is their pricing structures. Amazon EC2 offers a more complex and flexible pricing model, with on-demand, spot instances, and reserved instances options. On the other hand, Linode provides a simpler pricing structure with fixed plans, allowing users to easily determine their costs without any hidden fees.

  2. Scalability and Flexibility: Amazon EC2 offers more scalability and flexibility compared to Linode. With Amazon EC2, users can easily adjust the resources (CPU, RAM, storage, etc.) of their instances to match their requirements, allowing for dynamic scaling. Linode, while still providing scalability, may require users to manually upgrade or downgrade their server plan to adjust their resources.

  3. Global Infrastructure: Amazon EC2 has a vast global infrastructure with multiple regions and availability zones worldwide. This allows users to deploy their instances closer to their target audience, reducing latency and providing better performance. Linode, although expanding its infrastructure, currently has fewer datacenter locations compared to Amazon EC2.

  4. Service Integrations: Amazon EC2 offers a wide range of service integrations and features within the broader Amazon Web Services (AWS) ecosystem. This includes options like Amazon RDS for managed databases, Amazon S3 for object storage, and more. While Linode does provide integrations with some services, its ecosystem is not as extensive as AWS.

  5. Managed Services: Amazon EC2 offers various managed services that can simplify operations and administration for users. These services include the AWS Elastic Load Balancer, Autoscaling, and Amazon EBS for block storage, among others. In contrast, Linode primarily focuses on providing virtual servers and does not offer as many managed service options.

  6. Customer Support: Amazon EC2 provides strong customer support with 24/7 availability and multiple support channels, including phone, email, and live chat. Linode also has good customer support, but it may have limited availability compared to Amazon EC2.

In Summary, Amazon EC2 and Linode have several key differences. Amazon EC2 offers a more flexible pricing structure, extensive service integrations, and better scalability options. It also has a broader global infrastructure and provides a wide range of managed services. On the other hand, Linode offers a simpler pricing structure, decent scalability, and competitive customer support. Users should consider their specific requirements and preferences when choosing between them.

Decisions about Amazon EC2 and Linode

Albeit restricted to only a few places worlwide compared to its peers in the cloud segment, I am yet to find another provider capable of delivering a score over 5000 (Geekbench) in a benchmark on a single CPU machine, and each machine costs $6 a month. For homelab and experienced users who don't need DBaaS or IaaC's, it's a pretty straightforward choice. A more comprehensive review of Vultr's HF machines can be found here.

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Tejas Sangoi
Founder, CEO at Thalia Technologies · | 4 upvotes · 40.4K views

Our company builds micro saas applications. Based on the application we decide whether to deploy it over one of our shared servers or on a dedicated server.

We decided to Lightsail over EC2.

  1. Lightsail is a lightweight, simplified product offering that has a dramatically simplified console. The instances run in a special VPC, but this aspect is also provisioned automatically, and invisible in the console.

  2. Lightsail supports optionally peering this hidden VPC with your default VPC in the same AWS region, allowing Lightsail instances to access services like EC2 and RDS in the default VPC within the same AWS account.

  3. Bandwidth is unlimited, but of course free bandwidth is not -- however, Lightsail instances do include a significant monthly bandwidth allowance before any bandwidth-related charges apply.

  4. It has predictable pricing with no surprises at the end.

  5. The flexibility of EC2 leads inevitably to complexity. Whereas for Lighsail there is virtually no learning curve, here. You don't even technically need to know how to use SSH with a private key -- the Lightsail console even has a built-in SSH client -- but there is no requirement that you use it. You can access these instances normally, with a standard SSH client.

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Chose Hetnzer over DigitalOcean and Linode because Hetzner provides much cheaper VPS with much better specs. DigitalOcean might seems like a good choice at first because of how popular it is. But in reality, if all you need is a simple VPS, you won't benefit much from the their oversubscribed datacenters which often underperform other competitors. Linode is also a good choice. They have cheaper options and performs slightly better than DigitalOcean. In the end, choosing a more affordable host helps you save money. That's important when you're running a tight ship.

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Jerome/Zen Quah
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DigitalOcean was where I began; its USD5/month is extremely competitive and the overall experience as highly user-friendly.

However, their offerings were lacking and integrating with other resources I had on AWS was getting more costly (due to transfer costs on AWS). Eventually I moved the entire project off DO's Droplets and onto AWS's EC2.

One may initially find the cost (w/o free tier) and interface of AWS daunting however with good planning you can achieve highly cost-efficient systems with savings plans, spot instances, etcetera.

Do not dive into AWS head-first! Seriously, don't. Stand back and read pricing documentation thoroughly. You can, not to the fault of AWS, easily go way overbudget. Your first action upon getting your AWS account should be to set up billing alarms for estimated and current bill totals.

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Craig Finch
Principal Consultant at Rootwork InfoTech · | 6 upvotes · 183.4K views

We first selected Google Cloud Platform about five years ago, because HIPAA compliance was significantly cheaper and easier on Google compared to AWS. We have stayed with Google Cloud because it provides an excellent command line tool for managing resources, and every resource has a well-designed, well-documented API. SDKs for most of these APIs are available for many popular languages. I have never worked with a cloud platform that's so amenable to automation. Google is also ahead of its competitors in Kubernetes support.

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Stephen Fox
Artificial Intelligence Fellow · | 2 upvotes · 186.5K views

GCE is much more user friendly than EC2, though Amazon has come a very long way since the early days (pre-2010's). This can be seen in how easy it is to edit the storage attached to an instance in GCE: it's under the instance details and is edited inline. In AWS you have to click the instance > click the storage block device (new screen) > click the edit option (new modal) > resize the volume > confirm (new model) then wait a very long time. Google's is nearly instant.

  • In both cases, the instance much be shut down.

There also the preference between "user burden-of-security" and automatic security: AWS goes for the former, GCE the latter.

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Most bioinformatics shops nowadays are hosting on AWS or Azure, since they have HIPAA tiers and offer enterprise SLA contracts. Meanwhile Heroku hasn't historically supported HIPAA. Rackspace and Google Cloud would be other hosting providers we would consider, but we just don't get requests for them. So, we mostly focus on AWS and Azure support.

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