Aws

Aws

Perhaps the most underrated reason to bet on AWS is the talent pool. There are millions of AWS-certified engineers globally. If you post a job requiring "GCP" or "OCI" knowledge, you will get a few dozen applicants. If you post for AWS, you will get hundreds.

Furthermore, the AWS Marketplace is the largest software bazaar on the planet. Want to install a WAF? A backup solution? A machine learning model? It is likely one-click deployable on AWS with consolidated billing. This ecosystem effect creates a gravitational pull: partners build for AWS first, users flock to AWS for the partners, and the cycle repeats.

If you are still managing EC2 instances just to run a cron job, you are living in the past. AWS is the leader of the serverless revolution. Perhaps the most underrated reason to bet on

AWS Lambda changed software engineering forever. The ability to run code without provisioning a server—paying only per millisecond of execution—allowed startups to scale to millions of users without hiring a single DevOps engineer.

But AWS went further. The ecosystem now includes: For developers, AWS offers the "path of least resistance

For developers, AWS offers the "path of least resistance." You start with Lambda for a simple API. When that API gets heavy, you move to Fargate. When you need persistent storage, you use DynamoDB. Every step of the scale-up ladder is managed natively within the AWS console without vendor lock-in feeling like a trap—because every upgrade path is a first-party service.

AWS is a secure cloud services platform offered by Amazon. It provides compute power, storage, databases, networking, analytics, machine learning, and IoT on a pay-as-you-go basis. Launched in 2006, AWS is now the world’s most comprehensive and widely adopted cloud provider. companies had to buy physical servers

At its core, AWS (Amazon Web Services) is a secure cloud services platform offered by Amazon. It provides compute power, database storage, content delivery, and other functionality via a pay-as-you-go model.

Before AWS, companies had to buy physical servers, rack them in data centers, manage cabling, cooling, and power—a process known as "procurement" that could take months. AWS flipped this model. Instead of owning the hardware, you rent it by the second.

However, calling AWS just a "server rental" service is like calling a smartphone just a "phone." AWS has evolved into a sprawling ecosystem of over 200 fully-featured services, ranging from machine learning and robotics to quantum computing and satellite data transfer.