
AWS Service Spotlight: Amazon S3
Welcome to my AWS Service Spotlight series, where I break down AWS services, how they work, when to use them, and how they fit into real-world DevOps systems. This week we're starting with one of AWS's oldest and most underrated workhorses — Amazon S3 . Not because it's flashy, but because it saved me from a genuinely frustrating situation this week. More on that in a bit. What is Amazon S3? Simple Storage Service — that's what S3 stands for. And at its core, that's exactly what it is: a place to store files (called objects ) in the cloud, organized inside containers called buckets . Think of it like a USB drive that lives in the cloud, never loses data, scales infinitely, and can be accessed by anything with the right permissions. On a slightly more technical level: S3 is an object storage service . Unlike block storage (like an EBS volume attached to your EC2) or file storage (like EFS), S3 stores data as discrete objects — each with its own key, metadata, and access rules. It's not
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