Deprecated: Function create_function() is deprecated in /home2/blogwebhostingbu/public_html/wp-content/plugins/facebook-like-box-responsive/facebook-like-box.php on line 29
{"id":2345,"date":"2013-05-16T14:29:16","date_gmt":"2013-05-16T14:29:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.webhostingbuzz.com\/blog\/?p=2345"},"modified":"2013-05-16T14:29:16","modified_gmt":"2013-05-16T14:29:16","slug":"google-cloud-for-wordpress","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/blog.webhostingbuzz.com\/2013\/05\/16\/google-cloud-for-wordpress\/","title":{"rendered":"Google Cloud for WordPress"},"content":{"rendered":"

Google unveiled a number of changes to it’s Cloud Platform at Google i\/o yesterday. One of these major changes is the availability of the PHP runtime on Google’s cloud, allowing you to run the likes of WordPress from Google’s cloud. Google even mention WordPress as an application that Google Cloud is designed to support. But before everyone runs off to host WordPress on Google’s cloud, its important we do some further digging into the benefits\/disadvantages of hosting a WordPress blog on one of the big public clouds.<\/p>\n

Google’s Cloud<\/strong><\/h2>\n

Why is Google building a cloud platform? It is a rhetorical question but let me answer with an image.<\/p>\n

\"AWS<\/a>

Amazon Web Services market share (courtesy of OnApp)<\/p><\/div>\n

Google’s cloud is a direct competitor to Amazon’s AWS. Both Google and Amazon have hundreds of thousands of servers hosted around the world at various international datacenters. Amazon originally used this huge infrastructure farm to support Amazon.com operations around the globe. But in 2006, Amazon saw the value in using the technology they’d developed for their own website for a big public customer cloud and thus, AWS was formed.<\/p>\n

AWS has evolved from being a more of a hotshot among the developer community owning more than 80% of the public IAAS cloud market. Many businesses, from big to small, rely on AWS to power their websites, their applications and their critical business systems. A pay as you use, fully scalable, fully redundant cloud with no capex costs is most web businesses every dream. No more 6 or 7 figure server hardware purchases with no guarantees that all that server capacity will actually be used. And Bloomberg recently published a fascinating article on how Netflix’s operations<\/a> are powered by AWS. Netflix believe they understand AWS even better than Amazon do and better leverage the resources that it offers. Ditlev Bredahl’s recent\u00a0presentation<\/a>\u00a0at the Dell Cloud Summit in London shows just how big AWS is.<\/p>\n

It’s easy to see why Google wants a slice of this action. \u00a0And in Google’s recent announcement<\/a>, Google talks about ushering in the next generation of computing.<\/p>\n

WordPress webmasters<\/strong><\/h2>\n

But what does this mean for the regular WordPress webmaster? For the small or medium business that does not want to deal with the complexity of the pricing platforms of AWS or Google cloud? Or for the vast majority of webmasters and web users that want a friendly support team to help then when they encounter difficulties? While there’s no denying that the likes of AWS and Google Cloud are great for developers, great for applications that require infinite scaling up\/down of compete resources and great for businesses that need vast amounts of worldwide infrastructure at their immediate disposal, there’s plenty of reasons to stay away from these big public clouds. And I’ve identified 4 of them here:<\/p>\n