Guspaz wrote:
Being able to scale based on load on an hourly basis, or spin up linodes for quick tests for less than a full day, there is definitely value in that. I don't see myself personally using it, but I've heard enough people say they want to do this sort of stuff over the years...
I can see the advantage of hourly billing for load scaling, though I still think VMs at home are better (and cheaper) than setting up a Linode for a few hours.
sednet wrote:
I know how to use Xen, KVM, VirtualBox, Qemu, Vmware, and so on. The point isn't that I don't know how to setup virtual machines, it's that buying them is quicker and easier. Just to prove the point I just setup a Ubuntu 13.04 instance on amazon in 5 mouse clicks with zero typing. It costs 2 US Cents an hour to do that or 0.6 Cents an hour if I add a few more mouse clicks and use a spot instance instead.
You make it sound like VirtualBox is really hard to use. If you know how to use it, you'll know you can have a VM up in 30 seconds or less with minimal effort.
2 cents an hour may sound cheap to you rich people, but the word "cheap" doesn't exist in the dictionary of us poor people
