Quote:
Shipping is expensive, and keeping fresh hardware in those data centers will become expensive.
At the time of this post, Google said that 1 U.S. dollar = 0.646914219 Euros.
Exchanging rates, shipping, etc. certainly do make a difference, but I don't think it should matter too much. It's not as if every single stick of RAM must be shipped from USA to Europe. Most of these chips are made elsewhere anyway. Besides, I don't think caker flies to Fremont every time a new server needs to be set up there. Why should it be any different with, say, Sweden?
I know of a French company that recently began to offer Xen VPS's. (Don't worry, I won't advertise for Linode competitors.) They're still in beta, so the price is dirt cheap (about half of Linode per MB of memory), but they don't expect the final price to become any higher than US$15 per 256MB. That's slightly more than what we pay here at Linode, but the difference is almost negligible. Now if they can make a profit at that price, why can't Linode?
On a slightly different topic, I would like to see a datacenter in Asia/Australia. Even in Fremont, latency to these areas is quite noticeable. Tokyo, Seoul, Singapore anyone?
