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Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: May 29, 2012 14:38 UTC (45 seconds ago)

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The Amazon Web Services (AWS) are a collection of remote computing services (also called web services) offered over the Internet by Amazon.com.

Launched in July 2002, Amazon Web Services provide online services for other web sites or client-side applications. Most of these services are not exposed directly to end users, but instead offer functionality that other developers can use. In June 2007, Amazon claimed that more than 330,000 developers had signed up to use Amazon Web Services.[1]

Amazon Web Services’ offerings are accessed over HTTP, using REST and SOAP protocols. All are billed on usage, with the exact form of usage varying from service to service.

Contents

List of AWS services

  • Amazon Associates Web Service (A2S, formerly Amazon E-Commerce Service or ECS), providing access to Amazon's product data and electronic commerce functionality.
  • Amazon AWS Authentication is an implicit service, the authentication infrastructure used to authenticate access to the various services.
  • Amazon CloudFront, a content delivery network (CDN) for distributing objects stored in S3 to so-called "edge locations" near the requester.
  • Amazon DevPay, currently in limited beta, is a billing and account management system for applications that developers have built atop Amazon Web Services.
  • Amazon Elastic Block Store (EBS), providing persistent block level storage volumes for EC2.
  • Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2), providing scalable virtual private servers using Xen.
  • Amazon Elastic MapReduce, a web service that enables businesses, researchers, data analysts, and developers to easily and cost-effectively process vast amounts of data. It utilizes a hosted Hadoop framework running on the web-scale infrastructure of EC2 and Amazon S3.
  • Amazon Flexible Payments Service (FPS), currently in limited beta[2], provides an interface for micropayments.
  • Amazon Fulfillment Web Service provides a programmatic web service for sellers to ship items to and from Amazon using Fulfillment by Amazon.
  • Amazon Historical Pricing, providing access to Amazon's historical sales data from its affiliates. (Appears this service has been discontinued)
  • Amazon Mechanical Turk (Mturk), managing small units of work distributed amongst many people.
  • Amazon Relational Database Service (RDS), providing a scalable MySQL compatible database server.
  • Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3), providing Web Service based storage.
  • Amazon Simple Queue Service (SQS), providing a hosted message queue for web applications.
  • Amazon SimpleDB, allows developers to run queries on structured data. It operates in concert with EC2 and S3 to provide "the core functionality of a database."[3]
  • Amazon Virtual Private Cloud (VPC), in limited beta, a web service that creates a logically isolated set of Amazon EC2 instances to be connected to an existing network using a VPN connection.
  • AWS Management Console (AWS Console), A web-based point and click interface to manage and monitor the Amazon infrastructure suite including EC2, EBS, Amazon Elastic MapReduce, and Amazon CloudFront.
  • AWS Simple Monthly Calculator helps you estimate your AWS monthly costs

See also

References

External links








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