The keynote speeches kicked off at the Expo this afternoon. Tim O'Reilly started out by describing the latest thinking about Web 2.0. Dan Farber nicely summarized it in this post, quoting O'Reilly as saying: "It's about building the global computing network and harnessing all the collective intelligence of all the people who are connected….We are talking about persistent computing in which we are becoming part of a great machine". O'Reilly's other theme was that we ain't seen nothing yet on the Web - saying "we are at the visicalc stage", in a comparison with the PC era.
This theme of a global computing network continued when Amazon.com founder and CEO Jeff Bezos came on stage to talk about Amazon's latest business venture - a giant web services platform. Bezos said that S3 now has 5 billion objects stored in it. What's more, it had 920 million S3 requests on its peak day, and 16,607 requests in its peak second. Obviously we're talking about a very well scaled system here. The term Bezos used to describe it is "web-scale computing".

Photo: Scott Beale / Laughing Squid
O'Reilly and Bezos then had their usual conference chat, which is becoming a tradition at the Web 2.0 conferences. Bezos is always great value and as usual he didn't disappoint. When Tim asked Bezos why Amazon.com is doing platform services now, Bezos replied at first that they are just packaging something they're good at and selling it. When pressed, Bezos said that for 12 years they've been building a web-scale operation called Amazon.com. So what they are doing now is building a foundation - "foundational services" he called it - which are not making money now, but "we intend to make money". Nothing new in any of these answers, but the gist was obviously that long term Amazon sees the web services platform as being a very profitable business in the future.
Bezos also talked a little about EC2, which is their newest service released in 2006 (Elastic Computing Cloud). Right now EC2 is invite-only, because it is "capacity-constrained". However Bezos said that they hope it eventually becomes "demand-constrained" so they can roll it out to everyone. There is no such problem scaling S3, which is already open and available to anyone to use.
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For what its worth, I asked Amazon if I could visit a data center with my camera (and post the pictures here at RWW :).
Well..., don't expect any photos anytime soon. But the techo-geek in me would love to take a peak. One can just imagine all the pretty blinking lights enabling 16,607 requests per second.
I'm a total sucker for numbers. How many PCs linked together? What's the theoretical limit? How quickly can you add capacity? How much energy does one of these data centers take? Et Cetera.
Perhaps they'd let me write a haiku on what a data center looks like...
Posted by: John Milan | April 16, 2007 8:34 PM
So in the future I see Amazon buying Adobe/Macromedia and Verizon, integrating a huge web services system where a designer/developer could sign up get a domain name, get hosting build a website, test it within their framework with cutting edge development technology and end up making money almost instantaneously.
Wicked, huh!
Posted by: Ali | April 17, 2007 5:53 AM
Hello Mr. Bezos,
I am a former employee of Amazon.com in McDonough, Georgia.
I was wondering how can I get more information on the stock we were suppose to have gotten. Please send me the steps I need to take in doing so. And will there be another chance to work at another Amazon.con in McDonough, Georgia.
Thank you,
Meashelle Fuller
Posted by: Meashelle Fuller | April 23, 2007 9:18 PM