Regarding pricing, setup cost, and licensing, I do not remember the exact price, but I believe Ubuntu is open source, so I can assume that was free. As for MySQL on Ubuntu, I feel that was free as well or very low cost, but the actual machine running it generates the cost. Since MySQL on Ubuntu is quite lean, it results in low operational costs, making it favorable from a pricing perspective.
I think we can reduce licensing cost saving with MySQL on Ubuntu because there is no cost. In that case, we are also saving time because other providers have additional costs. I can say organization-level saving as well. A small company needs only 5 to 10 servers. A mid-sized company needs only 50 servers. For a large company, we need only 500-plus servers, approximately. In that case, we are saving some money in each case. Then support and maintenance saving because it is a very easy support, free support provided, and maintenance is also very cheaper. Another thing, hardware efficiency saving, I can say that because it runs well on smaller machines with efficient memory usage. Linux has a lower overhead than Windows. This impacts our 20 to 30% of servers needed, fewer servers needed for that. We can save lots of dollars on that. Downtime cost reduction is also there. Cloud cost saving is also there. Cloud means that generally, we are using the cloud, but this is a smaller system, so it will reduce the cost for the AWS cloud also because we are using the AWS. Those are, I can say in the short term, the number of servers we can save, on-prem or cloud, we can save.
MySQL on Ubuntu 22.04 LTS is a powerful RDBMS offering robust data management for enterprise applications. It provides a flexible environment for handling large databases with high availability and ease of integration.
MySQL on Ubuntu 22.04 LTS combines the reliability of an open-source database system with the stability of Ubuntu's latest long-term support version. This combination supports scalable applications, offering extensive support for high-performance queries and transactions....
Regarding pricing, setup cost, and licensing, I do not remember the exact price, but I believe Ubuntu is open source, so I can assume that was free. As for MySQL on Ubuntu, I feel that was free as well or very low cost, but the actual machine running it generates the cost. Since MySQL on Ubuntu is quite lean, it results in low operational costs, making it favorable from a pricing perspective.
I think we can reduce licensing cost saving with MySQL on Ubuntu because there is no cost. In that case, we are also saving time because other providers have additional costs. I can say organization-level saving as well. A small company needs only 5 to 10 servers. A mid-sized company needs only 50 servers. For a large company, we need only 500-plus servers, approximately. In that case, we are saving some money in each case. Then support and maintenance saving because it is a very easy support, free support provided, and maintenance is also very cheaper. Another thing, hardware efficiency saving, I can say that because it runs well on smaller machines with efficient memory usage. Linux has a lower overhead than Windows. This impacts our 20 to 30% of servers needed, fewer servers needed for that. We can save lots of dollars on that. Downtime cost reduction is also there. Cloud cost saving is also there. Cloud means that generally, we are using the cloud, but this is a smaller system, so it will reduce the cost for the AWS cloud also because we are using the AWS. Those are, I can say in the short term, the number of servers we can save, on-prem or cloud, we can save.
My experience with the pricing is that we are using free.
MySQL on Ubuntu is not expensive.