Google App Engine meets Amazon EC2

OK, now I need to mention the caveat that this isn’t really one cloud computing foundation running inside another.

It’s hard to say what the union could produce besides ugly children. But it’s not just a hypothetical hybrid: programmer Chris Anderson has released software called AppDrop that brings App Exchange to EC2. Programmer Andy Baio spotlighted the development Monday on his blog.

“It wouldn’t be that hard to write a Python adapter to MySQL that would preserve the BigTable API,” or application programming interface, Anderson is quoted as saying. “And while that wouldn’t be quite as scalable as BigTable, we’ve all seen that MySQL can take you pretty far.”

What do you get when you cross Amazon’s EC2 on-demand cloud computing infrastructure with Google’s new App Exchange foundation for Web applications?

Baio quotes Anderson as saying there’s room for database improvement, though, including software that could bridge to the more conventional MySQL database software.

In fact, Anderson just has the single-computer version of Google’s App Engine software running on EC2 rather than the real online one. That means software written with Google’s App Engine software developer kit can run on EC2 servers, but it can’t take advantage of some of the central features of App Engine. For example, it stores data on that particular server and can’t employ Google’s BigTable data-storage service to tap into Google’s large and load-balanced infrastructure.

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