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Pranav Bakare
Pranav Bakare

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7 AWS services

Here are the top 7 AWS services that are widely used for building, deploying, and managing cloud-based applications:

  1. Amazon EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud)

What it does: Amazon EC2 provides scalable virtual servers, called instances, to run applications in the cloud. You can choose the instance type, configure security settings, and scale the capacity according to your needs.

Why it’s popular: EC2 is a fundamental service for running web servers, databases, or any application requiring compute resources. It offers full control over the operating system and configuration.

Use case: Hosting websites, running big data workloads, machine learning models, or web applications.

  1. Amazon S3 (Simple Storage Service)

What it does: Amazon S3 is an object storage service that provides scalable, high-speed, and secure storage for data. It is often used for storing and retrieving large amounts of data like images, videos, backups, and logs.

Why it’s popular: S3 is highly durable (99.999999999% durability) and scalable. It’s ideal for developers, enterprises, and startups to store files and data.

Use case: Storing backups, media files, static websites, or large data archives.

  1. AWS Lambda

What it does: AWS Lambda is a serverless computing service that lets you run code without provisioning or managing servers. You only pay for the time your code executes.

Why it’s popular: It automatically scales, is cost-efficient, and is event-driven, making it great for running small, isolated pieces of code in response to events like file uploads, database changes, or HTTP requests.

Use case: Automating tasks, backend for microservices, processing uploaded files in real-time, and triggering functions based on events.

  1. Amazon RDS (Relational Database Service)

What it does: Amazon RDS is a managed relational database service that supports several database engines, including MySQL, PostgreSQL, MariaDB, Oracle, and Microsoft SQL Server.

Why it’s popular: RDS handles routine database tasks such as backups, patch management, and scaling, allowing you to focus on your application instead of database maintenance.

Use case: Running scalable relational databases for web applications, CRM systems, and e-commerce platforms.

  1. Amazon CloudFront

What it does: Amazon CloudFront is a content delivery network (CDN) that speeds up the delivery of your content (e.g., HTML, CSS, JavaScript, images, videos) by caching it at locations closer to the end users.

Why it’s popular: CloudFront helps reduce latency and improves the user experience by distributing content to multiple locations around the world (edge locations).

Use case: Accelerating the delivery of web applications, media streaming, and APIs.

  1. Amazon VPC (Virtual Private Cloud)

What it does: Amazon VPC allows you to create a logically isolated network in the AWS cloud. It gives you full control over your virtual networking environment, including IP address ranges, subnets, and route tables.

Why it’s popular: VPC provides a secure and scalable environment for running your applications and hosting sensitive data with strict access controls.

Use case: Hosting a private network for applications, creating secure environments for databases, and implementing hybrid cloud infrastructures.

  1. AWS IAM (Identity and Access Management)

What it does: AWS IAM allows you to manage access to AWS services and resources securely. It enables you to create and manage AWS users, groups, roles, and permissions.

Why it’s popular: IAM is critical for ensuring security in the cloud. It allows fine-grained control over who can access your resources and what actions they can perform.

Use case: Defining user roles, managing permissions, and ensuring that only authorized users can access specific AWS resources.


Why These Services Are popular?

These services form the backbone of most cloud-based architectures because they are highly scalable, flexible, and integrate well with other AWS services. Whether you're building a simple website or a complex distributed application, these services will likely be part of your AWS infrastructure, handling compute, storage, networking, security, and content delivery needs.

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