For 99 cents per month, the cloud service courts startups and developers with virtual servers that offer fast spinup, low cost, and 100% uptime.

Charles Babcock, Editor at Large, Cloud

September 30, 2014

4 Min Read
Atlantic.Net data center.

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Atlantic.Net is trying to stage an end run around the massive Amazon Web Services cloud and siphon off startup companies and independent developers. Its main weapons: plentiful SSDs, virtual servers that spin up in just a few seconds, and a 99 cents per month charge -- $11.88 a year.

Atlantic.Net, based in Orlando, Fla., Toronto, and Dallas, may never match the full catalogue of services listed on Amazon's site. But it's making the latest SSDs a standard feature of its lowest-cost servers. Marty Puranik, Atlantic.Net CEO and founder, said its customers' instances will be up and running within 30 seconds and, under normal circumstances, within 2-5 seconds.

In addition to Windows and Linux, it's offering FreeBSD, which is finding greater use as the Internet of Things starts heating up. Developers like it for its full driver set and stability, and it's finding its way into more and more networked devices. It doesn't hurt that WhatsApp, the $19 billion Facebook acquisition, runs its backend systems on FreeBSD. Puranik told us Atlantic.Net added Berkeley Unix a month ago.

The 99 cents a month "Go server" comes with 256 MB of RAM, 10 GB of storage, and a guarantee of 100% uptime, he said. Amazon offers no direct equivalent. Its t2.micro instance comes with 1 GB of RAM and costs $1.56 a month; a new customer gets one t2.micro for free for a full month of 750 hours. The t2 has AWS's uptime guarantee of 99.95%.

[Want to learn how Amazon is handling a vulnerability? See Amazon Reboots Cloud Servers; Xen Bug Blamed.]

Atlantic.Net bills customers by the second. If they shut down a virtual machine after the start of a new minute, they pay only for the seconds used in that minute. Amazon bills by the hour, charging for a full hour after the elapse of the first 15 minutes. "When you turn off the lights in your house, you don't expect to pay for electricity you didn't use during the rest of the hour."

Puranik said the Go server will appeal to "students, independent developers, startups, and IT managers at companies who want to try something, who want to get going on their wish list."

In addition to its micro server, Atlantic.Net offers a range of other virtual servers, going up to a size of 16 GB of RAM. Next month, it will add 32GB and 64GB servers. Amazon instances range from 1 GB to 244 GB of RAM.

Unlike most cloud service providers, customers may resize all three components of their servers -- RAM, CPU, and disk -- instead of just one of them.

Puranik said Atlantic.Net comes out of the co-location and managed services business and is using its 20 years of experience there to build key redundancies into its infrastructure. Each host server comes with redundant power supplies, RAID-based storage, and multiple Internet uplinks. Data backup is a checkbox option, but backup or failover to separate geographic locations is not yet an option.

"Cloud is our newest product," said Puranik, who claims his 35-employee company is growing at a rate of 10% a month. In its attempt to appeal to developers, Atlantic.Net resembles another East Coast service supplier, Digital Ocean, which also makes heavy use of SSDs and low pricing on small servers.

When it comes to the respective uptime guarantees, the penalty for downtime is a credit to the customer that's equivalent to the amount of time that the service was out of commission. In an interview, Paranik said Atlantic.Net has avoided any significant payout so far. Neither company pays penalties for the lost air time it may have cost customer applications or websites.

"We have small and midsized companies with small IT departments and some departments in large companies that don't want to go through IT procurement," he said. They turn to a relatively unknown, young supplier because "we offer a lot of value at a low price."

The firm operates on its own revenue and is not backed by venture capital.

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About the Author(s)

Charles Babcock

Editor at Large, Cloud

Charles Babcock is an editor-at-large for InformationWeek and author of Management Strategies for the Cloud Revolution, a McGraw-Hill book. He is the former editor-in-chief of Digital News, former software editor of Computerworld and former technology editor of Interactive Week. He is a graduate of Syracuse University where he obtained a bachelor's degree in journalism. He joined the publication in 2003.

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