The pricing is based on consumption. You pay for each process based on the transactions you make. The investment is almost the same as having your own on-premises solution, with the added costs of server administration, hardware resources, and maintenance. However, there are some cheaper solutions available on the AWS website.
It is very expensive. I would rate the pricing model a ten out of ten, with ten being the most expensive. There are additional costs to the standard licensing fees.
We have to pay extra for support. And it is expensive. But the overall licensing costs are okay. It is a pay-as-you-go model. I would rate the pricing an eight out of ten, where one is expensive and ten is cheap.
Director Data Science at a media company with 5,001-10,000 employees
Real User
Top 5
2023-07-11T19:22:19Z
Jul 11, 2023
They have hourly and monthly pricing, and because our use case is, more of a sporadic use, so I go for hourly pricing. Again, the details of the pricing is handled by the procurement. From an end user perspective, pay as you use hourly is suitable
On a scale of one to ten, where one is low and ten is a high price, I rate the pricing a two. So there is network connectivity storage and Amazon's FSx storage for which there are additional charges. Also, there is Amazon's AD Connector, for which there are some additional charges.
Director, Digital Workplace Engineering at a insurance company with 1,001-5,000 employees
Real User
2020-10-19T09:33:33Z
Oct 19, 2020
There are several different options available, but it can range anywhere from $85 to $150 a month per machine. The cost is based on the capacity and the resources of the machine itself.
Amazon WorkSpaces is a fully managed desktop-as-a-service (DaaS) solution provided by Amazon Web Services (AWS). It allows users to access a virtual desktop environment in the cloud from various devices, including laptops, tablets, and thin clients.
With Amazon WorkSpaces, users can have a complete desktop experience with their familiar applications and data, while the underlying infrastructure and management tasks are handled by AWS. The virtual desktops provided by Amazon WorkSpaces are...
The pricing is based on consumption. You pay for each process based on the transactions you make. The investment is almost the same as having your own on-premises solution, with the added costs of server administration, hardware resources, and maintenance. However, there are some cheaper solutions available on the AWS website.
It is very expensive. I would rate the pricing model a ten out of ten, with ten being the most expensive. There are additional costs to the standard licensing fees.
The tool's pricing depends on company turnover and the organization's relationship with Amazon. I rate it a six out of ten.
We have to pay extra for support. And it is expensive. But the overall licensing costs are okay. It is a pay-as-you-go model. I would rate the pricing an eight out of ten, where one is expensive and ten is cheap.
Price-wise Amazon Workspaces is cheaper than most services available.
They have hourly and monthly pricing, and because our use case is, more of a sporadic use, so I go for hourly pricing. Again, the details of the pricing is handled by the procurement. From an end user perspective, pay as you use hourly is suitable
The solution is expensive. I advise others to check which licensing models suits their business requirements best.
On a scale of one to ten, where one is low and ten is a high price, I rate the pricing a two. So there is network connectivity storage and Amazon's FSx storage for which there are additional charges. Also, there is Amazon's AD Connector, for which there are some additional charges.
The solution is not very cheap and it is not too pricey.
The bundle works out to be approximately $20.00 per month.
There are several different options available, but it can range anywhere from $85 to $150 a month per machine. The cost is based on the capacity and the resources of the machine itself.