What is the most cost effective hardware for R?
On May 9, 2012, at 17:46 , Michael Sumner wrote:
Barry, *fortunes* are very auspicious but you are already well represented.
"..as nebulous as cloud computing..", indeed!
Cheers, Mike. On Thu, May 10, 2012 at 1:38 AM, Whit Armstrong <armstrong.whit at gmail.com> wrote:
I don't work for Amazon, but here is one of their promo pieces on using 'spot' instances: http://youtu.be/WD9N73F3Fao at about 2:15, they cite University of Melbourne and Universitat de Barcelona as customers... My interest in all this cloud talk is that I'll be presenting a tutorial on R in the cloud at R/Finance. http://www.rinfinance.com/agenda/ It's really easy to use R in the cloud, even if you don't want to move your data into s3. -Whit On Wed, May 9, 2012 at 9:36 AM, Barry Rowlingson <b.rowlingson at lancaster.ac.uk> wrote:
On Wed, May 9, 2012 at 2:22 PM, John Laing <john.laing at gmail.com> wrote:
For 200,000 analyses at 1.5 seconds each, you're looking at ~83 hours of computing time. You can buy time from Amazon at roughly $0.08 / core / hour, so it would cost about $7 to run your analyses in the cloud. Assuming complete parallelization you could fire up as many machines as you need to get the work done in as little time as you want, with the same fixed cost. I think that's a pretty compelling argument, compared to the hassles of buying and maintaining hardware, power supply, air conditioning, etc.
Noticing Hugh's .ac.uk email address you do have to factor in the hassle of getting something as nebulous as cloud computing past the red tape. "How much will it cost?" says the bureaucrat. "Depends how much CPU time I need", says the academic. "So potentially, what's the most?" says the bureaucrat. "Millions,", says the academic, honestly, adding "but that would only be if my job scheduling went a bit mad and grabbed a few thousand Amazon cores and thrashed them for weeks without me noticing". "Okay", says the bureaucrat, "now, can we send Amazon a purchase order so that Amazon send us an invoice for this unknown and potentially unpredictable cost first?". "Oh no", says the academic, "we need a credit card...". Maybe there are other ways of paying for Amazon cloud CPUs, I've not investigated. Anyone in academia happily crunching on EC2? Barry
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-- Michael Sumner Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies, University of Tasmania Hobart, Australia e-mail: mdsumner at gmail.com
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