{"id":3789,"date":"2014-08-18T10:00:16","date_gmt":"2014-08-18T00:00:16","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.macquarietelecom.com\/?p=3789"},"modified":"2023-03-01T16:41:21","modified_gmt":"2023-03-01T05:41:21","slug":"pay-per-minute-billing-models","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/macquarietechnologygroup.com\/news\/pay-per-minute-billing-models\/","title":{"rendered":"Pay-Per-Minute Billing Models"},"content":{"rendered":"
Volker Rath, subject matter expert<\/p><\/div>\n
Authored by Volker Rath, Hosting Subject Matter Expert<\/strong><\/p>\n Pay by the minute billing models are touted by some competitors as a cost-effective option, but they are usually not of good value. Competitors actually educate the market by proclaiming that this is the best way to go. We strongly disagree. If you require hosting or a provider for business-critical infrastructure, you are not setting a system up for only a few minutes of use. You do not need an email server for five minutes a day, and you do not need a web server for only three hours a day. Let\u2019s investigate why some companies can charge by the minute while others do not.<\/p>\n First of all, it all comes down to the solution stack. This is not only a commercial decision made by an individual provider. If a solution stack is built upon standard building blocks that allow for zero flexibility, automated solutions can be fully provisioned and decommissioned in a very short time frame. However, if a company wants to host business-critical infrastructure, this requires a bespoke solution. A special firewall unit and dedicated load balancer must probably be deployed. The infrastructure is running on a hybrid environment<\/a>, such as a mixture of colocated dedicated servers<\/a> and cloud servers working together.<\/p>\nWhy can<\/strong>\u2019<\/strong>t I buy cloud computing at Macquarie Telecom by the minute, so I can just pay for what I consume?<\/strong><\/h3>\n