Amazon.com's Future Isn't in Books or E-Commerce
EAST PALO ALTO, Calif.-Amazon.com, one of the
universally acknowledged Web 2.0 world leaders that has made its fortune by
selling books, CDs and DVDs through its online stores, now sees its long-term
future in the Web services subscription and storage business-otherwise known as
cloud computing.
During the last three years, Amazon has come out with its S3 (Simple Storage
Service) online storage and the EC2 online platform for software developers.
Both have been wildly successful.
With S3, individual users or companies can "lease" as much storage as
they desire to use for saving business documents, photos, video or any other
kind of digital data.
With EC2, developers can save enormous amounts of money using a standard
infrastructure and plenty of computing power to build software applications
that work in Web environments. It is ideal for startups.
The empirical evidence that Amazon is going whole hog into the cloud business?
It is now using nearly two-thirds of its available bandwidth for that rapidly
growing part of the business-even though its stores continue to process
thousands of transactions a minute and remain very successful in their own
right.
In other words, Amazon.com is doing quite well, thank you, even through this
volatile U.S.
macroeconomy.
"We just passed the 29 billion object mark in our S3 storage," Adam
Selipsky, vice president of product management and developer relations at
Amazon, told me at the 2008 Global Technology Leaders Summit here at the Four
Seasons. "That's, um, a lot of things stored."
No kidding. Amazon doesn't do a lot of advertising, either, so the main channel
of growth here has been good, old-fashioned word of mouth.
"We have this chart back at the office [in Seattle],
which shows the amount of overall bandwidth we use on a daily basis for all our
businesses," Selipsky told me during a break at the summit. "The
online services business bandwidth line crossed over the stores' line a few
months ago, so yes, we're right on track, as we see it."
Selipsky should know what he's talking about. He is in charge of all of
Amazon's storage and development online services.
CEO and founder Jeff Bezos also told a group of
analysts recently that he sees the future in terms of Web services
provisioning. So it's plain to see where the company is headed.
"We're working on developing a lot more online services, also,"
Selipsky said. "Can't really talk about them here, but we'll keep you in
the loop."
