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greg-m | 4 years ago
For archival use-cases, you do still pay us for data storage. We're referring to not charging for operations for infrequent access - we'll likely drop the stored data charge down too, eventually, but the current pricing is complex enough.
jacurtis|4 years ago
I am an AWS administrator/architect for work so we are always trying to weigh pros and cons. AWS S3 is notoriously overpriced. This is a well-established fact. There are many other providers that offer comparable solutions (or even superior) such as the new R2. But we feel the effect of vendor lock-in because of S3's integration with other AWS services, which is what keeps a lot of people over-paying for S3. I think the auto-migration feature is potentially one of the best arguments for switching to R2.
R2 is undeniably a better value than S3. S3 requires me to select a region and optionally even limit an availability zone (if I need to keep costs low). CDN/edge locations are all extra cost via AWS Cloudfront. And the reality is many people are already using Cloudflare as CDN in front of S3 storage. So R2 just becomes a no-brainer at that point. I think it will be a successful launch. I am excited to try it.
rsync|4 years ago
Very informal survey ... but I wonder if you are familiar with the 'rclone' tool:
https://rclone.org/
... just curious ...
sillysaurusx|4 years ago
I suppose my only skepticism is "but how fast can I egress?" -- if the bandwidth is 100x slower than GCP, it might dampen my enthusiasm a little bit. But honestly I'd still take a 100x slowdown if it means I can do long term archival without paying $200 just to download the data, soooo....
Anyway, cheers, and thanks for doing impactful work!
mst|4 years ago
Not necessarily.
A nearlyfreespeech noted when they changed to a charge-by-incoming-bandwidth model, links are still often bought symmetrically and for them the thing that eats the most bandwidth is incoming DDoS attacks, not legitimate traffic.
It seems to me that Cloudflare are likely to be in this situation except even more so.
sillysaurusx|4 years ago
CameronNemo|4 years ago
[deleted]
Matheus28|4 years ago
prirun|4 years ago
Backblaze (the consumer thing, not B2) has always had unlimited backups, and still does. One of their execs (Brian) posted a graph showing a backup space utilization histogram for all customers in 2018. The first few data points are:
30% use <100GB 15% use <200GB 9% use <300GB ...
So ~55% of their customers are using <300GB and paying $6/mo. On B2, their cloud storage product, $6 will buy 1.2TB of storage. Way more than half of their unlimited customers are paying 4x more for unlimited storage than they would if they paid for metered storage.
Interestingly, on that same histogram, are the last 2 customers: one using 293TB and one using 430TB. While IMO they are misusing the service, they are also an extreme minority. If that last guy was paying for that space with B2, it would cost $2150/month. Backblaze has said they just don't care. Now if it were half their users doing it, of course they would.
I can tell you one thing: R2 with free bandwidth is going to be a gift for the porn industry!
mst|4 years ago
politician|4 years ago
judge2020|4 years ago
https://blog.cloudflare.com/introducing-r2-object-storage/#:...
In my opinion, expect 3-6 months for the beta, then maybe 2 years for GA. Storage at scale isn't easy, especially if they want to be comparable to aws in speed, SLA, data protection (ie. duplicated to 3+ physical data silos), etc.
GordonS|4 years ago
I'm using Azure, rather than AWS, and I hope R2 is available for Azure eventually too.
In the mean time, I came across a Cloudflare blog post from earlier this year that said you can use Azure's preferred routing feature to point to Cloudflare, which will result in "substantially cheaper" egress bandwidth fees. Sounded good, but when I looked at Azure's bandwidth pricing it looks like egress routed through Cloudflare is barely any cheaper, only 9% or so :(
The question: am I missing something, or is that paltry reduction really all Azure is doing?
stavros|4 years ago
E.g. https://developers.cloudflare.com/cloudflare-one/connections...
selcuka|4 years ago
https://gist.github.com/selcuk/90ce1ce8b8d46c869efd6da24cde1...
tomjen3|4 years ago
I am not planing on doing either, but I am just curious what you would do about it?
sodality2|4 years ago