Xeround

Zlotkin, a former research fellow at MIT Sloan School of Management,[3] founded five other startups including Radview (NASDAQ:RDVW).

[7] The product allows MySQL users to scale their database and achieve high availability on cloud platforms like Amazon EC2.

[13] On May 1, 2013, Xeround announced to its paid customers that they were shutting down the cloud database service and all data must be migrated before being dropped on May 15, 2013.

The service offers pay-per-use pricing, calculated per Gigabyte per hour, with an additional charge for data transfer for large databases.

This involves purchasing a machine instance on a cloud computing platform like Amazon EC2, and manually installing a database.