The use case mainly was to deploy a database that there was no option for the platform as a service. It is a database based on a graph, the name is Neo4j. So in AWS, I didn't find the RDS of this database. So I had to create a virtual machine in Lightsail and deploy the Neo4j database on it.
I did it for the test and production environment, and then it allowed me to create firewall rules and a lot of management networks, but they are pretty simplified. It's not like EC2 where you can have all of those virtual interfaces and virtual networks. It's more like an instance that is standalone. But at least for these small purposes, it attended very well.
Lightsail has simplified the process of setting up and managing a virtual private server a lot.
Because I'm able to do it in a few clicks and have the data machine deployed. Like ten clicks is very different, very simplified, then EC2, in that you have to configure a lot of virtual networks, disk management, and a lot of other points regarding the virtual machine environment.
And in Lightsail, they simplified to do it in as few clicks as possible. So, around ten clicks, you have a virtual machine deployed.
I also leverage it for basic monitoring capabilities. I've set up some basic alerts, for example, to email me if the operating system shuts down, to be aware. But that's the extent of my monitoring features.