Ninefold re-jigs pricing as cloud market crowds

 

Launches micro-instances, targets Amazon and Rackspace.

Sydney-based IaaS provider Ninefold today announced changes to its pricing structure in an effort to attract customers from large-scale cloud computes based overseas.

The start-up reduced the size of its smallest compute instance – launching the “Micro Instance” – the most bare-bones version of which will cost around AUD$0.04 per hour.

The new “micro instances” start at 1 CPU, 384 MB RAM and 80 GB Storage.

For comparison, Ninefold’s smallest compute instance upon launch was 1 CPU, 1.7GB RAM and 160 GB of storage.

The new micro instances best suit “low volume, low traffic applications” that run on a single OS instance, the company said.

Ninefold accompanied the announcement with a pricing chart that pitches Ninefold as a cheaper alternative to Rackspace and Amazon.com for one specific, small Linux instance.

The company had previously bristled at calculations made by this publication that pitched Ninefold as among the cheapest providers in Australia, but still a 20 to 30 percent premium on foreign providers.

 

Source: Ninefold
Note: Rackspace has informed iTnews that Ninefold's comparison is flawed - being that Ninefold does not charge the $100 fee on its standard support plan, only on its managed services plan.

Ninefold supplied iTnews with specifications for each of these instances for a more detailed comparison.

  • The Ninefold instance is 1 CPU (equivalent 1.2-2.8GHz) with 1.7GB RAM and 80GB persistent storage.
  • The Amazon Web Services instance is 1 CPU (equivalent 1.0-1.2 GHz), with 1.7GB RAM and 80GB Elastic Block Storage.
  • The Rackspace instance is 2GB RAM, an undisclosed number of CPU cycles, with 80GB storage.

What is missing from the comparison is the high cost of internet bandwidth in Australia.

  • Ninefold charges $0.90/GB outbound and currently offers inbound traffic free as a promotional offer.
  • Amazon Web Services (Singapore) charges $0.19 outbound and $0.10 inbound.
  • Rackspace (US) charges $0.18 outbound and $0.08 inbound.

“Ninefold’s local Australian internet bandwidth charges are extremely competitive within Australia, and provide huge customer benefits of fastest local latency, multi-carrier fastest route, local data jurisdiction and local support,” said Ninefold managing director, Peter James.

What do you think? Do you consider this pricing transparent and comparable to services supplied overseas? What premium would you be prepared to pay for faster speeds, local storage and local support?

Copyright © iTnews.com.au . All rights reserved.


Ninefold re-jigs pricing as cloud market crowds
 
 
Comments: 0
Comments have been disabled for this article.
 
 
 
Top Stories
CommBank suppliers compete for portable workloads
Multi-sourcing deals yield $100m savings.
 
Australia turns to homegrown drones
Debating the finer points of unmanned aerial vehicle design.
 
The New Zealand telco problem
Opinion: Could Telstra save Kiwi telcos?
 
Sign up to receive iTnews email bulletins
   FOLLOW US...

Latest VideosSee all videos »

Latest Comments
Polls
Should the Government enact new legislation to protect copyright holders in the digital age?

   |   View results
Yes
  20%
 
No
  80%
TOTAL VOTES: 529

Vote