Introduction to the AWS Snow Family
The original AWS Snowball service was introduced in 2015. It started out as a mechanism to move large amounts of data when doing so over the network wasn’t reasonable. In the ensuing years, customer demand for new capabilities has driven the expansion of this line into different variants with use-case-specific capabilities:
Figure 4.1 – AWS Snow Family devices
All offer an interface and operating model that is consistent with Amazon EC2 and Amazon S3, and they are all designed to run autonomously. All AWS Snow Family devices operate their own local control, management, and data planes. Thus, they do not require a consistent network connection back to the AWS cloud to operate.
AWS Snow Family devices can all host local object storage buckets that utilize the same API/CLI interface as Amazon S3 buckets. When a customer orders one, it is sent to them, they copy their data to these local buckets, and then...