One is supposed to go for Amazon AWS CloudSearch since, with other clouds, it will take time. For example, if you have 1,000 employees in your company. On a daily basis, a few employees are joining, and a few others are being released or resigning. The resource they are using in the cloud with Amazon is immediate and easy to release the resources with immediate effect, but in other clouds, it won't be possible. If you are releasing the resource, it means you are paying to the cloud for the web space. If you are expecting that, you need 10 GB of space, and you are utilizing 10 GB space with some strategic resource to the employee with whatever you have. Each time you are utilizing, let's say, ten employees are released from the company, and five to ten people are joining the company, while you have 10 GB, and you may require 10 GB more. In that case, you can utilize the balance or make it balanced. In such a case, the cost will be reduced. Considering that the solution's use cases may depend on and vary from organization to organization, I rate the overall solution a nine out of ten.
System Administrator at Kenyatta National Hospital
Real User
Top 10
2023-03-17T11:30:30Z
Mar 17, 2023
I'm a customer and end-user. I've been using the latest version of the solution. We are using a cloud VM solution at the moment, and we want to migrate our infrastructure to the cloud. It's easy to license and deploy. I'd rate the solution ten out of ten.
Product Manager - Cloud at Orient Technologies Pvt. Ltd.
Real User
Top 10
2023-01-13T12:18:44Z
Jan 13, 2023
We're an Amazon partner. I'd rate the product ten out of ten. We are happy with the service. I'd advise others to talk to an AWS Amazon solutions architect before implementation. A company needs to understand the solution and what it can do before jumping in. Once they understand the benefits and the process of deployment, then they can begin. There is a lot of training available online, specifically on Youtube and also on the Amazon portal for CloudSearch. Users can easily begin to educate themselves on aspects of the product.
Analyst - Information Security at Infosys Technologies Ltd
Real User
2020-01-29T08:35:00Z
Jan 29, 2020
My role and responsibility is to check the services of the security platform in question to see if it fits the requirements. For example, there are members of our team who are looking to leverage some services from the public cloud, I just look at their business requirements and see what services they want to leverage on a solution. Physically if there is something that is lacking in security that I can foresee, I explain the best practices to follow to enable additional security controls. This may be making stronger authentications, authorizations, or having stronger data security and encryption. I'd rate the solution nine out of ten. Depending on an organization's requirements and budgets, cloud services would be recommended. A user must just decide what they need and stick to one thing.
Yesterday, a friend asked me about our migration. He asked what worked and where we host our system. I would tell you the benefits of AWS and the latest in communication between Egypt and AWS. NTRA is the government communication in Egypt. It is very good and very bad. You might have to wait two weeks and just accept the communication. That's it. I recommended AWS for my friend yesterday. I would rate this solution as nine out of ten. This is the best web hosting solution. It might not be excellent because of the issues I mentioned. If these issues were addressed, maybe it would be ten out of ten.
Amazon CloudSearch is a managed service in the AWS Cloud that makes it simple and cost-effective to set up, manage, and scale a search solution for your website or application.Amazon CloudSearch supports 34 languages and popular search features such as highlighting, autocomplete, and geospatial search. With Amazon CloudSearch, you can quickly add rich search capabilities to your website or application. You don't need to become a search expert or worry about hardware provisioning, setup, and...
I would recommend it. Overall, I would rate it nine out of ten.
One is supposed to go for Amazon AWS CloudSearch since, with other clouds, it will take time. For example, if you have 1,000 employees in your company. On a daily basis, a few employees are joining, and a few others are being released or resigning. The resource they are using in the cloud with Amazon is immediate and easy to release the resources with immediate effect, but in other clouds, it won't be possible. If you are releasing the resource, it means you are paying to the cloud for the web space. If you are expecting that, you need 10 GB of space, and you are utilizing 10 GB space with some strategic resource to the employee with whatever you have. Each time you are utilizing, let's say, ten employees are released from the company, and five to ten people are joining the company, while you have 10 GB, and you may require 10 GB more. In that case, you can utilize the balance or make it balanced. In such a case, the cost will be reduced. Considering that the solution's use cases may depend on and vary from organization to organization, I rate the overall solution a nine out of ten.
I'm a customer and end-user. I've been using the latest version of the solution. We are using a cloud VM solution at the moment, and we want to migrate our infrastructure to the cloud. It's easy to license and deploy. I'd rate the solution ten out of ten.
We're an Amazon partner. I'd rate the product ten out of ten. We are happy with the service. I'd advise others to talk to an AWS Amazon solutions architect before implementation. A company needs to understand the solution and what it can do before jumping in. Once they understand the benefits and the process of deployment, then they can begin. There is a lot of training available online, specifically on Youtube and also on the Amazon portal for CloudSearch. Users can easily begin to educate themselves on aspects of the product.
We're switching to Microsoft Azure because customers in Europe prefer it due to their GDPR laws. I would rate AWS CloudSearch three out of ten.
I would recommend this solution to others. I rate Amazon AWS CloudSearch an eight out of ten.
My role and responsibility is to check the services of the security platform in question to see if it fits the requirements. For example, there are members of our team who are looking to leverage some services from the public cloud, I just look at their business requirements and see what services they want to leverage on a solution. Physically if there is something that is lacking in security that I can foresee, I explain the best practices to follow to enable additional security controls. This may be making stronger authentications, authorizations, or having stronger data security and encryption. I'd rate the solution nine out of ten. Depending on an organization's requirements and budgets, cloud services would be recommended. A user must just decide what they need and stick to one thing.
I'd definitely recommend Amazon AWS CloudSearch. On a scale of one to ten I'd rate it an eight.
Yesterday, a friend asked me about our migration. He asked what worked and where we host our system. I would tell you the benefits of AWS and the latest in communication between Egypt and AWS. NTRA is the government communication in Egypt. It is very good and very bad. You might have to wait two weeks and just accept the communication. That's it. I recommended AWS for my friend yesterday. I would rate this solution as nine out of ten. This is the best web hosting solution. It might not be excellent because of the issues I mentioned. If these issues were addressed, maybe it would be ten out of ten.
Think about making good use of the tool, meaning: Look at your project or requirements and restructure thinking of the use of CloudSearch.