Customer Company Size
SME
Region
- Europe
Country
- Sweden
- United Kingdom
Product
- Linode
- Xen virtualization platform
Tech Stack
- API
- IPv6
- SSD servers
Implementation Scale
- Enterprise-wide Deployment
Impact Metrics
- Customer Satisfaction
- Productivity Improvements
- Cost Savings
Technology Category
- Platform as a Service (PaaS) - Connectivity Platforms
- Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) - Cloud Computing
- Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) - Cloud Storage Services
Applicable Industries
- Software
- Professional Service
Applicable Functions
- Business Operation
- Product Research & Development
Use Cases
- Remote Collaboration
Services
- Cloud Planning, Design & Implementation Services
- System Integration
- Software Design & Engineering Services
About The Customer
Based in Stockholm, Cloudnet Sweden AB is a hosting service that provides a managed, Linux–built platform for running applications and web sites. It focuses on providing platform-as-a-service (PaaS), so its customers can run/develop their own apps in an environment conducive to creativity. Cloudnet has spun up Linodes since 2011. It’s co-founder, Anders Brundin, was interviewed for this case study. Cloudnet’s managed product off-loads admin duties, including backups, system monitor support, OS upgrades and package updates. This comes in handy for developers who are not especially steeped in Linux. Cloudnet’s product is supported by a qualified team, about which Brundin takes pride in its responsiveness. These two complements permit end users to develop their apps in what Brundin describes as a “happy” environment.
The Challenge
Back in 2007 – ’08, Brundin and Magnus Appelquist initiated a parttime business out of Stockholm, Sweden, that provided PaaS to a handful of developer and web-design friends and acquaintances. Demand for their service grew. In 2010, the two men incorporated as Cloudnet Sweden, AB. Since that inception, Cloudnet’s main objective has been to “provide our customers with the most reliable hosting service possible,” Brundin asserts. Web designers stand as Cloudnet’s typical user. In fact, Brundin and Appelquist collaborate with Swedish web-design agencies, which subsequently recommend Cloudnet to their customers. This vertical integration of app development services makes it easy for developers and web designers to confidently create - with little concern about system integrity or resource depletion. With agency backing and Cloudnet servers, a Swedish web designer can focus on the task at hand. Cloudnet’s managed product off-loads admin duties, including backups, system monitor support, OS upgrades and package updates. This comes in handy for developers who are not especially steeped in Linux. Cloudnet’s product is supported by a qualified team, about which Brundin takes pride in its responsiveness. These two complements permit end users to develop their apps in what Brundin describes as a “happy” environment. The inaugural Cloudnet service marshaled the power of physical servers and gave rise to the biggest hurdle Brundin and Appelquist would ever have to leap: server interconnectivity. While Brundin enjoyed working with physical servers and racked data centers, he and his staff found it difficult to address mounting issues within Cloudnet’s own data center. Moreover, physical servers constrained the breadth of its managed service. Shortly after Cloudnet’s incorporation, Brundin surveyed the hosting market and noticed a move to the cloud. Nevertheless, he remained a proponent of physical servers. He questioned whether the purported advantages of being in the cloud would continue to outweigh those of physical servers and data centers. In short, he was not certain that the cloud would prevail. Consequently, Cloudnet bootstrapped a parallel hybrid environment, relying on both physical servers in Stockholm as well as virtual servers in the cloud, many of which were and are Linodes. While the hybrid environment sufficed for Cloudnet’s needs and its customers’ demands, eventually, Cloudnet moved fully to the cloud, averting many interconnectivity and performance headaches.
The Solution
Cloudnet has sought to reduce the threat of extended outages, decrease its staff’s stress level, and deliver more satisfied customers. Linode has helped Cloudnet realize these goals. In terms of customer support, Linode gives Cloudnet “really good and quick responses,” says Brundin. “Other suppliers don’t have the same standards (as Linode).” In terms of billing confusion, Linode’s hourly billing satisfies Cloudnet’s criteria for simplicity and predictability. In addition, Linode’s price-plan flexibility matches Cloudnet’s tailored sizing, without charging for more resources than are needed. That’s efficiency and economy. In terms of providing the greatest service to its customers, Brundin declares, “Linode significantly contributes to Cloudnet’s ability to offer its customers unparalleled hosting services.” Linode’s “significant contributions” result from its meeting and exceeding Cloudnet’s four criteria for selecting its virtual vendors: The vendor must fit the Cloudnet business model, The vendor’s resources in the cloud must be reliable, The vendor must offer independent, local servers without firewalls, and with direct storage, The vendor must offer an API. Brundin appreciates Linode, but he gives no free passes. “We continually evaluate our providers,” he says. “Simply, we choose to work with services we are confident won’t have outages.” Linode remains one of Cloudnet’s blue-chip providers because it uses the Xen virtualization platform, which enables Linode to build a reliable and flexible infrastructure for its customers. Because of latency issues that accompany remote hardware, Cloudnet sought servers in Europe, if not Sweden. Linode’s London data center meets this criteria. “We’d love to have servers in Stockholm,” Brundin confides, “but London will do.” By using Linode’s servers as part of its virtual battalion, Cloudnet can insulate them by configuring its own firewall(s), which Linode support encourages. Firewall installation can minimize system threats and disruptions. Moreover, Linode offers direct storage only - meeting Cloudnet’s criterium - a distinct advantage over networked storage. (Direct storage can be accessed more quickly, secures data more soundly, and is less susceptible to network disruptions.) Linode also helps maximize Cloudnet’s up-time by allowing it to be accessed from multiple locations. Because Brundin and Appelquist frequently travel throughout Europe and need access to their data on a moment’s notice, it was imperative that a cloud-host service not be bound to a singular location. Linode isn’t. Cloudnet also prefers that its vendors offer productivity tools, like an API, control panel and IPv6 compatibility. Linode offers all three, complementing Cloudnet’s ability to create and install servers quickly (“We do lots of automation for our clients, to save them time,” says Brundin.), to delight their staff with a provider’s product that is “nice” to work with, and to be forward thinking and highly technical (IPv4 addresses are exhausted). Linode’s API helps Cloudnet more quickly create and install servers for its clients by specifying a set of task-specific routines and by facilitating software interaction.
Operational Impact
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