top | item 3479787 (no title) zerosanity | 14 years ago From the limits page(1) I see you can only have 256 tables per account.(1) http://docs.amazonwebservices.com/amazondynamodb/latest/deve... discuss order hn newest werner|14 years ago As with all the other AWS services you can have your limits lifted upon request. justinsb|14 years ago Can the 10GB per domain limit be raised on SimpleDB? Or do I have to promise to refer to it as DynamoDB to do that? :-) yahelc|14 years ago Does that apply for the 50-per-account cap on S3 buckets as well? load replies (1) mikehuffman|14 years ago The fact that you can make composite keys should make that irrelevant.Edit: to clarify, I think that composite keys would make your problem limited to 256 distinct applications, not, for example, 256 customers, users, etc.
werner|14 years ago As with all the other AWS services you can have your limits lifted upon request. justinsb|14 years ago Can the 10GB per domain limit be raised on SimpleDB? Or do I have to promise to refer to it as DynamoDB to do that? :-) yahelc|14 years ago Does that apply for the 50-per-account cap on S3 buckets as well? load replies (1)
justinsb|14 years ago Can the 10GB per domain limit be raised on SimpleDB? Or do I have to promise to refer to it as DynamoDB to do that? :-)
yahelc|14 years ago Does that apply for the 50-per-account cap on S3 buckets as well? load replies (1)
mikehuffman|14 years ago The fact that you can make composite keys should make that irrelevant.Edit: to clarify, I think that composite keys would make your problem limited to 256 distinct applications, not, for example, 256 customers, users, etc.
werner|14 years ago
justinsb|14 years ago
yahelc|14 years ago
mikehuffman|14 years ago
Edit: to clarify, I think that composite keys would make your problem limited to 256 distinct applications, not, for example, 256 customers, users, etc.