Comment by PUSH_AX 1 year ago Some quick back of napkin math says 190TB would cost about $12k in AWS cloudfront costs. 3 comments PUSH_AX Reply boesboes 1 year ago FYI: From my experience, if you do more the 20-25TB, you can get 75% off no questions asked. dbish 1 year ago If you’re regularly a large customer like that, seems like just moving to AWS directly would make the most sense right? arielcostas 1 year ago At that scale, probably. Especially since AWS would offer you discounts over their public prices too. Netlify et al probably stop making sense when they cost more than a few engineering hours and the cost of AWS, Azure or GCP
boesboes 1 year ago FYI: From my experience, if you do more the 20-25TB, you can get 75% off no questions asked. dbish 1 year ago If you’re regularly a large customer like that, seems like just moving to AWS directly would make the most sense right? arielcostas 1 year ago At that scale, probably. Especially since AWS would offer you discounts over their public prices too. Netlify et al probably stop making sense when they cost more than a few engineering hours and the cost of AWS, Azure or GCP
dbish 1 year ago If you’re regularly a large customer like that, seems like just moving to AWS directly would make the most sense right? arielcostas 1 year ago At that scale, probably. Especially since AWS would offer you discounts over their public prices too. Netlify et al probably stop making sense when they cost more than a few engineering hours and the cost of AWS, Azure or GCP
arielcostas 1 year ago At that scale, probably. Especially since AWS would offer you discounts over their public prices too. Netlify et al probably stop making sense when they cost more than a few engineering hours and the cost of AWS, Azure or GCP
FYI: From my experience, if you do more the 20-25TB, you can get 75% off no questions asked.
If you’re regularly a large customer like that, seems like just moving to AWS directly would make the most sense right?
At that scale, probably. Especially since AWS would offer you discounts over their public prices too. Netlify et al probably stop making sense when they cost more than a few engineering hours and the cost of AWS, Azure or GCP