[150243] in North American Network Operators' Group
Re: Colo Vending Machine
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Mike Lyon)
Mon Feb 20 00:49:29 2012
From: Mike Lyon <mike.lyon@gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <CAJ0+aXY7Fh3ng36=UG2crSwmO9U7Uxp9pcpMs7zP_d1QdHXCNw@mail.gmail.com>
Date: Sun, 19 Feb 2012 21:48:35 -0800
To: Anurag Bhatia <me@anuragbhatia.com>
Cc: NANOG <nanog@nanog.org>, John Curran <jcurran@istaff.org>
Errors-To: nanog-bounces+nanog.discuss=bloom-picayune.mit.edu@nanog.org
My rsync appeared to be running at 20+ Mbps to S3 last night...
Sent from my iPhone
On Feb 19, 2012, at 21:41, Anurag Bhatia <me@anuragbhatia.com> wrote:
> Nice idea of future! :)
>
>
> Btw as side question - I heard transfer rates from S3 are capped badly.
> Something like 5-10Mbps. Is that true? Anyone of you ever came across such
> cap?
>
> On Mon, Feb 20, 2012 at 11:08 AM, Jimmy Hess <mysidia@gmail.com> wrote:
>
>> On Sun, Feb 19, 2012 at 3:05 PM, Astrodog <astrodog@gmail.com> wrote:
>>> This gives me an idea. The vending machine could also sell hosting.
>>> Sometimes, the box just won't come back to life and you need somewhere
>>> to stuff the data. *grin*
>>
>> How about a vending machine, where you insert a hard drive, swipe your
>> card,
>> and it either gets vaulted to S3 or an EC2 intance is spawned on the
>> cloud, and the data on the drive becomes the instance's boot media and
>> gets streamed to the instance storage over a 10-gigabit connection
>> from the vending machine, until all the data's uploaded.
>>
>> That solves the problem of end users getting their data to the hosting
>> provider quickly, with no need to stress out their low-speed WAN.
>>
>> --
>> -JH
>>
>>
>
>
> --
>
> Anurag Bhatia
> anuragbhatia.com
> or simply - http://[2001:470:26:78f::5] if you are on IPv6 connected
> network!
>
> Twitter: @anurag_bhatia <https://twitter.com/#!/anurag_bhatia>
> Linkedin: http://linkedin.anuragbhatia.com