8/30/2022, 12:00:00 AM ~ 8/31/2022, 12:00:00 AM (UTC)

Recent Announcements

Announcing VMware Cloud on AWS integration with Amazon FSx for NetApp ONTAP

AWS and VMware now offer a supplemental, jointly-engineered network file system (NFS) datastore option for VMware Cloud on AWS so you can reduce costs and accelerate your migration to the cloud. Amazon FSx for NetApp ONTAP is a fully managed service that allows you to run NetApp ONTAP filesystems on AWS. With this integration, you can attach scalable, high-performance storage, independent from your compute resources, to your VMware Cloud on the AWS Software Defined Data Center (SDDC).

Amazon RDS for Oracle now supports M6i and R6i instances in new regions

Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS) for Oracle now supports M6i and R6i instances in new regions. In April 2022, Amazon RDS for Oracle has already launched the support of M6i and R6i instances in some regions.

AppFlow now supports Salesforce version 55.0 and additional AWS PrivateLink regions

Amazon AppFlow, a fully managed integration service that helps customers to securely transfer data between AWS services and software-as-a-service (SaaS) applications in just a few clicks, now supports Salesforce API version 55.0 which is the latest API in the Salesforce Summer ’22 release.

Amazon QuickSight launches a new user interface for dataset management

Amazon QuickSight launches a new user interface for dataset management. Previously, the dataset management experience was a popup dialog modal with limited space and all functionality shown up in one small modal. The new dataset management user interface replaces the existing popup dialog modal with a full-page experience, providing a clearer breakdown of dataset management categories, including Summary, Refresh, Permissions and Usage. This update also lays the foundation for future enhancement and features. For further details, visit here.

A new sign-in experience is now generally available for Amazon QuickSight

Amazon QuickSight is changing the way users sign in to the service with a new look and feel that aligns the sign-in experience with existing AWS application sign-in patterns. The QuickSight sign-in process is now a three-step experience: 1) the first page requires your QuickSight account name, 2) the second page asks for your user name, 3) the third page varies depending on your sign in configuration: native QuickSight or Active Directory user, AWS root user, or IAM user. This change does not affect users who use single sign on (SSO.)

Amazon Macie adds ability to tune findings with allow lists, and enhances machine learning models to better identify sensitive data

We are pleased to announce a new capability to create allow lists in Amazon Macie. You can now create and use allow lists to specify text or text patterns that you don’t want Macie to report as sensitive data. For example, an allow list might include corporate addresses, names of executives, or sample data that is used for testing. When you create a sensitive data discovery job, you can configure the job to use one or more of your allow lists, in addition to choosing from a growing list of Macie managed data identifiers (MDI).

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