An expensive solution is no solution

Start getting used to saving big, even while exploiting the full power of the public cloud even in production. Public Cloud Support & Marketing, including technical documentation is often geared to use you as guinea pigs or selling you the most services - not providing the best solutions.

The Real Cost of the Cloud

Resource Typical Cost Cost w/ Reactor Savings
Relational Database $2,500 per month $750 per month 70% $50,000 vs. $15,000 for 20 instances
Virtual Machine $450 per month $150 per month 67% $90,000 vs. $30,000 for 200 VMs
MongoDB M40 (4 vCPUs, 16GB RAM)
$759.20 per month
M20 (2 vCPUs, 4GB RAM)
$146 per month
81% $37,960 vs. $7,300 for 50 clusters
Total per Month 71% $177,969 vs. $52,300
Total per Year $2,135,628 vs. 627,600

This table indicates savings based on typical resource usage in Production.

  • When your relational database is only used as a data store, it can be smaller than you ever thought possible.
    • While a typical production database can be thousands of dollars per month, with Reactor your database spend can be well under a thousand dollars per instance, even in production.

  • Use the smallest cloud resources like VMs with two cores, 8GB RAM and high-latency networks.
    • This means significant dollar savings when you spend less than $200 per month, per VM as opposed to more than $400 per month, per VM with the recommended sizes from public cloud.
    • These savings quickly add up when you scale up from 10 to hundreds of VMs with growth.

  • Our hybrid database architecture means that you can store billions of records on the cloud at a pittance of the cost of conventional tech.
    • This means you would be spending a few hundreds of dollars per database cluster, rather than thousands.
    • You can start smaller than you ever thought possible, and spend significantly lesser, while being able to get superior performance and scalability for the same data sizes.

  • Get used to fine-grained control of cloud resources based on actual usage rather than arbitrary recommendations which fill the coffers of already fat public cloud companies.
    • Start from the smallest cloud resources to begin with. Maximize savings using elastic, horizontal scaling of cloud resources.
    • In some cases, you can stay at the same size and only increase disk size to get better Disk I/O if high Disk I/O is the reason for scalability issues. This can be significantly cheaper than going to a higher tier of a VM instance (as an example).
    • In some cases, you can increase just the RAM, and stay at the same number of cores, when low system memory is found to be the reason for scalability issues.
    • Only increase the core count when sustained high CPU usage is found to be the reason for scalability issues.

 

We are a Research Company

Our mission is to advance data-driven Software Development by fundamentally reimagining it, leveraging decades of industry experience to transcend current limitations and challenges.

We will achieve this goal by offering reusable, industry-agnostic services and development tools designed with two key goals in mind: simplifying code and providing a robust foundation for all aspects of building data-driven applications. Our aim is to empower developers to focus on building the application rather than the infrastructure behind it.

Our Research focuses on continuous improvement in areas like Caching, Search, Data Access, Multi-threaded Programming, Programming Language Capabilities, Configuration Management, State Handling, and Logging.

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