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Amazon Web Services [AWS]
What actually AWS is? and how to learn to use it?
14 Answers
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AWS is a LOT of things. Your best bet is to go directly to their website and check it out. I haven't used all of the stuff AWS offers, but I've used some of their cloud VPS' (lightsail) before and had a good experience with it. From what I've used through them, I'd feel confident in recommending them.
https://aws.amazon.com/
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PART 2 (CONTINUED)
AWS CloudHSM
AWS Directory Service
AWS Key Management Service
AWS Organizations
AWS Shield
AWS WAF
AWS Artifact
AWS Mobile Hub
Amazon API Gateway
Amazon Cognito
Amazon Pinpoint
AWS Device Farm
AWS Mobile SDK
AWS Cost Management
AWS Cost Explorer
AWS Budgets
AWS Cost and Usage Report
AWS Step Functions
Amazon API Gateway
Amazon Elastic Transcoder
Amazon Simple Queue Service (SQS)
Amazon Simple Notification Service (SNS)
Amazon Pinpoint
Amazon Simple Email Service (SES)
Amazon Chime
Amazon WorkDocs
Amazon WorkMail
Amazon WorkSpace
^This is end of list. As you can see, there is a LOT of services. To learn each one, you'll want to check it out on their site and read up on its documentation. They've done a good job of documenting.
Good luck to ya!
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PART 1
Amazon EC2
Amazon EC2 Container Registry
Amazon EC2 Container Service
Amazon Lightsail
Amazon VPC
AWS Batch
AWS Elastic Beanstalk
AWS Lambda
Auto Scaling
Elastic Load Balancing
Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3)
Amazon Elastic Block Storage (EBS)
Amazon Elastic File System (EFS)
Amazon Glacier
AWS Storage Gateway
AWS Snowball
AWS Snowball Edge
AWS Snowmobile
Amazon Aurora
Amazon RDS
Amazon DynamoDB
Amazon DynamoDB Accelerator (DAX)
Amazon ElastiCache
Amazon Redshift
AWS Database Migration Service
AWS Migration Hub
AWS Application Discovery Service
AWS Database Migration Service
AWS Schema Conversion Tool
AWS Server Migration Service
AWS Snowball
AWS Snowball Edge
AWS Snowmobile
Amazon VPC
Amazon CloudFront
Amazon Route 53
AWS Direct Connect
Elastic Load Balancing
AWS CodeStar
AWS CodeCommit
AWS CodeBuild
AWS CodeDeploy
AWS CodePipeline
AWS X-Ray
AWS Tools & SDKs
Amazon CloudWatch
Amazon EC2 Systems Manager
AWS CloudFormation
AWS CloudTrail
AWS Config
AWS OpsWorks
AWS Service Catalog
AWS Trusted Advisor
AWS Personal Health Dashboard
AWS Command Line Interface
AWS Management Console
AWS Managed Services
Amazon Lex
Amazon Polly
Amazon Rekognition
Amazon Machine Learning
Apache MXNet on AWS
TensorFlow on AWS
AWS Deep Learning AMIs
Amazon Athena
Amazon EMR
Amazon CloudSearch
Amazon Elasticsearch Service
Amazon Kinesis
Amazon Redshift
Amazon QuickSight
AWS Data Pipeline
AWS Glue
AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
Amazon Cloud Directory
Amazon Inspector
Amazon Macie
AWS Certificate Manager
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You're more than welcome Jorvis. lol Was a pain but I got all of them listed for you. Again, you'll want to investigate each one, as they're all different and serve different purposes. AWS is a great set of services imo; worth learning / using.
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There's a lot of breathing room in their free tier, they have premade images (so you can set up a coding stack) and they have virtualized network equipment too.
For a unique (marginally related) detail, I used their service to work through most of Hurricane Electric's IPv6 certification (you couldn't get the very last tests done though; AWS managed DNS is slightly incompatible)
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Kirk brings up an excellent point. I forgot they had the free-tier stuff so you can get your feet wet with a lot of their services. Worth checking out before you decide to purchase anything.
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Scroll to the bottom of the main page and you'll see all of the categories, each one with multiple services listed under it. Or at the top hover over Product, and you'll see all of them. You'll see why I told you to go to the website instead; too many things there for me to list or describe here.
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@KirkSchafer Thanks for answering my doubt.
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okay... I will check out their website.
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yeah! I understand... currently I'm checking out their website.
Thanks for answering my question.
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WOW!!! you really listed them for me.
Thanks a Ton!! 🙋🙋
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yeah! I will go through the documentation as mentioned by you!
☺
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Okay, that's something great to know that there are free services too before going into premium.
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Amazon Web Services is a subsidiary of Amazon.com that provides on-demand cloud computing platforms to individuals, companies and governments, on a paid subscription basis. It is basically a public cloud which anyone can utilize. It has many pros (accessibility, cost savings) but also cons (Disaster Recovery! especially if you're storing your business data there. Check out Cloudendure instead).