justin wrote:
I don't get the point of people wanting Linode to provide an S3 type of solution. If all you need is storage, just use S3 or if needed CloudFront.
So, you're saying Linode shouldn't provide certain cloud services, and Linode customers should be forced to use Linode's closest competitors to get those features on their Linode? It's not unreasonable to hope that a cloud services provider would have certain services that their competition offers.
It was worse before Linode began offering free incoming traffic, but S3 has some extra costs above and beyond what you'd have on a local Linode service. You need to pay for the bandwidth to send data to the S3 store (unlike a local Linode service might), and S3's outbound bandwidth costs are generally higher (double the price for Tokyo).
Justin wrote:
I am suggesting a different solution; elastic storage that can be mounted to Linodes as if it were physical disks with LOW LATENCY. Even further, can be mounted to multiple Linodes. Basically the real use case for this is a load balanced setup, where a cluster of Linodes read/write files from a centralized mount point.
The vast majority of requests for elastic storage to date have been for slower cheaper network storage to supplement the very expensive but very fast local storage we have now. Unless cost is a concern, you can do exactly what you propose right now yourself using multiple linodes. If you don't want to take the effort (understandable), the use case still seems fairly limited, since it would only appeal to users who are exceeding the IOPS of existing Linode hardware.