If you need a very distributed architecture with lots of edge locations for low latency and high-speed connections, Azion is a good option. It's a full-stack edge computing platform on a large network with more than 100 edge locations on four continents, designed to provide better performance, security, reliability and efficiency with features like 10x faster apps and 15ms response time. It's got pay-as-you-go pricing with a free trial, so it's good for e-commerce, entertainment, finance and other use cases.
Another good option is Gcore, which offers a cloud and edge platform with a globally distributed network of more than 180 CDN POPs and 25 cloud locations. It's geared for low latency and high availability, with options like Edge Cloud, Edge Network, Streaming Platform and Edge Security. Gcore is good for gaming, entertainment, e-commerce and health care, with secure, flexible and scalable infrastructure that includes managed Kubernetes and load balancers.
If you want something more programmable, Fastly offers an edge cloud platform with options like network services for optimized content delivery, next-gen WAF for security and a serverless compute foundation. Its Edge Mesh and Media Shield services offer big improvements in time-to-first-byte and multi-CDN operations, and it's good for digital publishing, e-commerce and streaming. Fastly also offers a free tier and flexible, scalable pricing plans.
Last, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure offers a distributed cloud platform with more than 100 cloud services that can be deployed in public clouds, on-premises or in a hybrid environment. With a wide range of services including AI and machine learning, big data and networking, OCI is good for many industries. It's competitively priced with no long-term commitments, so it's a good option for businesses that need a powerful and secure cloud foundation.