Amazon just keeps on getting better!  One of these days I'll have to
revisit my usage of them .. which is currently mainly cheap S3 storage.

Dropbox is built on top of AWS and could easily offer Glacier to its users:
Near your limit? Archive some stuff and we'll give you that space back.
 Need the archived data?  We'll give you access (somehow).

Is there a hosting service built on top of AWS? .. i.e. $20 or less access
to the usual LAMP stack?

   -- Owen



---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Amazon Web Services <[email protected]>
Date: Wed, Nov 14, 2012 at 2:31 AM
Subject: Amazon S3 Now Supports Archiving Data to Amazon Glacier
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>


Dear Amazon Web Services Customer,

We are pleased to introduce a new storage option for Amazon S3 that enables
you to utilize Amazon Glacier’s extremely low-cost storage service for data
archival.  Amazon Glacier stores data for as little as $0.01 per gigabyte
per month, and is optimized for data that is infrequently accessed and for
which retrieval times of several hours are suitable.  With the new Amazon
Glacier storage option for Amazon S3, you can define rules to automatically
archive sets of Amazon S3 objects to Amazon Glacier for even lower cost
storage.

To store Amazon S3 objects using the Amazon Glacier storage option, you
define archival rules for a set of objects in your Amazon S3 bucket,
specifying a prefix and a time period.  The prefix (e.g. “logs/”)
identifies the object(s) subject to the rule, and the time period specifies
either the number of days from object creation date (e.g. 180 days) or the
specified date after which the object(s) should be archived (e.g. June 1st
2013).  Going forward, any Amazon S3 standard or Reduced Redundancy Storage
objects past the specified time period and having names beginning with the
specified prefix are then archived to Amazon Glacier.  To restore Amazon S3
data stored using the Amazon Glacier option, you first initiate a restore
job using the Amazon S3 API or the Amazon S3 Management Console.  Restore
jobs typically complete in 3 to 5 hours. Once the job is complete, you can
access your data through an Amazon S3 GET request.

You can easily configure rules to archive your Amazon S3 objects to the new
Amazon Glacier storage option by opening the Amazon S3 Management
Console[1] and following these simple steps:

1)      Select the Amazon S3 bucket containing the objects that you wish to
archive to Amazon Glacier.
2)      Click on “Properties.  Under the “Lifecycle” tab, click “Add rule.”
3)      Enter an object prefix in the “Object prefix:” input box.  This
rule is now applicable to all objects with names that start with the
specified prefix.
4)      Choose whether you want to archive your objects based on the age of
a given object or based on a specified date.  Click the “Add Transition”
button and specify the age or date value.  Click the “Save” button.

The Amazon Glacier storage option for Amazon S3 is currently available in
the US-Standard, US-West (N. California), US-West (Oregon), EU-West
(Ireland), and Asia Pacific (Japan) Regions.  You can learn more by
visiting the Amazon S3 Developer Guide[2] or joining our Dec 12 webinar[3].

Sincerely,
The Amazon S3 Team

[1] https://console.aws.amazon.com/s3/home
[2] http://docs.amazonwebservices.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/Welcome.html
[3] https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/793180906

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