How to successfully adopt Amazon Web Services
Andrew Rigg, Managed Services Solution Architect at Perfect Image, explores three case studies that demonstrate how adopting AWS can help bring businesses success.
Andrew Rigg, Managed Services Solution Architect at Perfect Image, explores three case studies that demonstrate how adopting AWS can help bring businesses success.
Various developments including the growing volume of IoT data and the emergence of new AI incorporating applications, is set to drive demand for high performance computing (HPC) solutions over the next five years, contributing to an increasingly vibrant, and competitive, market for
Amazon Web Services (AWS) has announced a five-week accelerator for clean energy startups to help them accelerate their impact, access additional resources, and expand their reach. Addressing climate change requires innovation across the world, across industries, and across startups and multi-national corporations.
Amazon made the decision at the weekend to stop Parler from hosting its service on AWS, much to the chagrin of conservatives in America.
Amazon Web Services has upgraded some of its servers in the US East, US West, Europe and Asia Pacific regions with AMD’s second-generation EPYC processors.
Amazon wants to make it easier for users to transfer data between AWS and SaaS applications by removing the need to write custom integration code.
Amazon wants to make it easier for Windows customers to migrate their workloads over to AWS, which is why it has finally released the Migration Acceleration Program for Windows.
Despite Amazon continuing to show significant annual growth in cloud sales from AWS, the firm’s market share has dipped ever so slightly as of Q4 2019, according to research firm Canalys. That’s because it faces increased competition from the likes of Microsoft,
As part of its digital transformation, 3M, the multinational conglomerate corporation operating in the fields of industry, worker safety, health care, and consumer goods, has announced that it’s going to move its enterprise IT infrastructure to Amazon Web Services.
Snowflake, the American cloud-based data-warehousing startup, has followed up the opening of its Japan office by announcing the general availability of Snowflake on Amazon Web Services in the Tokyo region.
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