I have completed that course from an online course on Simplilearn, and partially I'm working from three months with Amazon Lightsail.
My experience with Amazon Lightsail is good; it is user-friendly and useful for small and medium-type businesses because it is affordable. Compared to EC2, Amazon Lightsail is better.
Amazon Lightsail is a virtual instance that is a service of Amazon AWS, designed to store data securely and provide applications through the cloud at an affordable cost to the SME sector.
I projected on Amazon Lightsail after completing the course. I worked with Amazon Lightsail, ECS, Lambda, and more, gaining experience with these services.
I use Amazon Lightsail for small apps, large scale projects, and enterprises. It is affordable and easy to use for small and medium-sized businesses, and it is very easy to deploy in any servers such as VPS and database.
It is a live project with Amazon Lightsail where we have to create, maintain, manage the service, and deploy the service to SME sectors.
With Amazon Lightsail, I find it easy to do the deployment. It helps me in application deployment processes and development since the service is already made by the developer, and we just need to do the deployment.
The best features in Amazon Lightsail include predictable pricing; its plans bundle compute, storage, and bandwidth into simple monthly rates. Furthermore, it offers a free tier for new users and three months free of select OS if they are using any OS such as Windows and Linux, providing free service for new users.
I find the load balancing and CDN features in Amazon Lightsail important for applications as they are useful. These features are cost-effective; if we compare them to EC2, Amazon Lightsail's service is very cost-effective and easy to deploy.
The load balancer in Amazon Lightsail improves the service, and it is essentially one kind of instance. Load balancing in Amazon Lightsail is effective.
Amazon Lightsail's support for various operating systems and software stacks is valuable.