Amazon� (NASDAQ: AMZN ) �Web Services today made public Amazon Redshift, a cloud-based data warehouse service that costs one-tenth of traditional solutions. Amazon has already partnered with business intelligence companies and consultancies to help customers make the transition.
For data needs ranging from a few hundred gigabytes to a petabyte or more, customers can open an Amazon Redshift cluster without all the associated costs of on-site data warehouses. Amazon manages and�automates common administrative tasks like provisioning, configuring, monitoring, backing up, and securing a data warehouse. Altogether, the service costs customers�about $1,000 per terabyte per year, or $0.85 an hour.�
Since Amazon announced the service at the AWS re: Invent conference in Nov. 2012, limited-preview customers have raved about the benefits -- mainly about Redshift's significant speed and freedom from managing their own warehouses.�Amazon attributes its high performance to advanced techniques, like columnar data storage, advanced compression, and a high performance IO and network.
"We started using Amazon Redshift immediately after it was announced and we obtained crazy performance, especially in loading data," said�Maxime M�zin, Data Scientist at Photobox, one of Europe's leading on-line photo service providers. "It took just five minutes to load a dataset that previously took days to extract on our side."
AWS has partnered with SAP (NYSE: SAP ) , IBM� (NYSE: IBM ) , MicroStrategy� (NASDAQ: MSTR ) , Informatica (NASDAQ: INFA ) , Actuate� (NASDAQ: BIRT ) , and others, to help customers support Redshift, along with the tools they use today. Technology consulting companies including Capgemini, Cognizant� (NASDAQ: CTSH ) , and Full360 have consultants ready to help large and small customers with Amazon Redshift implementations.
For now, Amazon Redshift is only available in the U.S. East (N.�Virginia) Region, but will be rolled out to other AWS Regions in the coming months.
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