Tutorials References Exercises Videos Menu
Free Website Get Certified Pro

AWS Cloud Tutorial

AWS HOME AWS Intro AWS Cloud Certification AWS Get Started AWS Cloud Computing AWS Cloud Benefits AWS EC2 Intro AWS EC2 Instance Types AWS EC2 Pricing AWS EC2 Scaling AWS EC2 Auto Scaling AWS Elastic Load Balancing AWS Messaging AWS SNS AWS SQS AWS Serverless AWS Lambda AWS Containers AWS ECS AWS EKS AWS Fargate AWS First Recap AWS Infrastructure AWS Regions AWS Availability Zones AWS Edge Locations AWS Provision AWS Provision Services AWS Elastic Beanstalk AWS CloudFormation AWS Second Recap AWS Networking AWS Connectivity AWS Subnet and Access AWS Global Networking AWS Third Recap AWS Storage and DBs AWS Instance Stores AWS EBS AWS S3 AWS EBS vs S3 AWS Elastic File System AWS RDS AWS DynamoDB AWS DynamoDB vs RDS AWS Redshift AWS DMS AWS Additional DB Services AWS Fourth Recap AWS Cloud Security AWS Shared Responsibility AWS User Access AWS Organizations AWS Cloud Compliance AWS DDoS AWS Other Services AWS Fifth Recap AWS Monitoring and Analytics AWS CloudWatch AWS CloudTrail AWS TrustedAdvisor AWS Sixth Recap AWS Pricing and Support AWS Free Tier AWS Pricing Models AWS Billing Dashboard AWS Consolidated Billing AWS Budgets AWS Cost Explorer AWS Support Plans AWS Marketplace AWS Seventh Recap AWS Migration and Innovation AWS Cloud Adoption Framework AWS Migration Strategies AWS Snow Family AWS Innovation AWS Eight Recap AWS Cloud Journey AWS Well-Architected Framework AWS Cloud Benefits AWS Ninth Recap AWS Exam Preparation

AWS Examples

AWS Cloud Exercises AWS Cloud Quiz

Specializations

AWS Fundamentals Java App on AWS Node.js App on AWS Python App on AWS

Guided Projects

Create VM EC2 Wordpress Site EC2 S3 Basics Hosting in AWS S3 NodeJS Website JS Variables and Operators MySQL DB with AWS RDS Web Hosting and Replication Amazon Aurora DB DynamoDB With Python and Boto3 AWS ECR Object Detection With AWS Sagemaker AWS Event Bridge and Lambda

More AWS

AWS Machine Learning AWS Serverless

AWS Support Plans


AWS Cloud Support Plans

AWS offers four different support plans.

  • Basic
  • Developer
  • Business
  • Enterprise

AWS Support Plans Video

W3schools.com collaborates with Amazon Web Services to deliver digital training content to our students.


Basic Support

Basic is the default support option.

Basic support is free.

It grants access to whitepapers, documentation, and support communities.

There are limitations for what you can contact AWS for.


Paid Support

You need to pay to access a higher level of support than basic.

The alternatives are:

  • Developer: lowest cost
  • Business: cost in the middle
  • Enterprise: highest cost

The alternatives cover different needs.

All plans have a monthly price.

Read here to compare support plans: Compare AWS Support Plans


Developer Support

Access to everything in Basic plus:

  • Best practice guidance
  • Client-side diagnostic tools
  • Building-block architecture support on how to use AWS services together

Business Support

Everything in Basic and Developer plus:

  • Use-case guidance
  • All TrustedAdvisor checks
  • Limited support for third-party software


Enterprise Support

Everything in Basic, Developer, and Business plus:

  • Application architecture guidance
  • A short project to assess and guide your company on architecture and scale
  • Technical account manager

Technical Account Manager (TAM)

The Enterprise Plan includes access to a Technical Account Manager.

The TAM is the primary point of contact.

She helps you with design, architecture, and how to grow with AWS.

The TAM has access to expertise in all AWS services.


Read more about Support Plans at: AWS Support Plans Product Page


AWS Cloud Exercises

Test Yourself With Exercises

Exercise:

Fill in the missing Support Plans

1. 
2. Developer
3. 
4. Enterprise

Start the Exercise