12/12/2024, 12:00:00 AM ~ 12/13/2024, 12:00:00 AM (UTC)
Recent Announcements
Starting today, you can use Amazon Route 53 Resolver DNS Firewall and DNS Firewall Advanced in the Asia Pacific (Malaysia) Region.\n Route 53 Resolver DNS Firewall is a managed service that enables you to block DNS queries made for domains identified as low-reputation or suspected to be malicious, and to allow queries for trusted domains. In addition, Route 53 Resolver DNS Firewall Advanced is a capability of DNS Firewall that allows you to detect and block DNS traffic associated with Domain Generation Algorithms (DGA) and DNS Tunneling threats. DNS Firewall can be enabled only for Route 53 Resolver, which is a recursive DNS server that is available by default in all Amazon Virtual Private Clouds (VPCs) and that responds to DNS queries from AWS resources within a VPC for public DNS records, VPC-specific domain names, and Route 53 private hosted zones. DNS Firewall provides more granular control over the DNS querying behavior of resources within your VPCs by letting you create “blocklists” for domains you don’t want your VPC resources to communicate with via DNS, or take a stricter, “walled-garden” approach by creating “allowlists” that permit outbound DNS queries only to domains you specify. With DNS Firewall Advanced, you can also configure rules to alert on or block DNS traffic associated with more advanced DNS threats. Visit the AWS Region Table to see all AWS Regions where Amazon Route 53 is available. Please visit our product page and documentation to learn more about Amazon Route 53 Resolver DNS Firewall and its pricing.
Amazon EC2 C7g instances are now available in the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions
Starting today, Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) C7g instances are available in the AWS GovCloud (US-East, US-West) Regions. These instances are powered by AWS Graviton3 processors that provide up to 25% better compute performance compared to AWS Graviton2 processors, and built on top of the the AWS Nitro System, a collection of AWS designed innovations that deliver efficient, flexible, and secure cloud services with isolated multi-tenancy, private networking, and fast local storage.\n Amazon EC2 Graviton3 instances also use up to 60% less energy to reduce your cloud carbon footprint for the same performance than comparable EC2 instances. For increased scalability, these instances are available in 9 different instance sizes, including bare metal, and offer up to 30 Gbps networking bandwidth and up to 20 Gbps of bandwidth to the Amazon Elastic Block Store (EBS). To learn more, see Amazon EC2 C7g. To explore how to migrate your workloads to Graviton-based instances, see AWS Graviton Fast Start program and Porting Advisor for Graviton. To get started, see the AWS GovCloud (US) Console.
Amazon RDS for PostgreSQL announces Extended Support minor 11.22-RDS.20241121
Amazon Relational Database Service (RDS) for PostgreSQL announces Amazon RDS Extended Support minor version 11.22-RDS.20241121. We recommend that you upgrade to this version to fix known security vulnerabilities and bugs in prior versions of PostgreSQL. Learn more about the updates and patches in this Extended Support minor version in the Amazon RDS User Guide.\n Amazon RDS Extended Support provides you more time, up to three years, to upgrade to a new major version to help you meet your business requirements. During Extended Support, Amazon RDS will provide critical security and bug fixes for your RDS for PostgreSQL databases after the community ends support for a major version. You can run your PostgreSQL databases on Amazon RDS with Extended Support for up to three years beyond a major version’s end of standard support date. You are able to leverage automatic minor version upgrades to automatically upgrade your databases to more recent minor versions during scheduled maintenance windows. Learn more about upgrading your database instances, including minor and major version upgrades, in the Amazon RDS User Guide. Amazon RDS for PostgreSQL makes it simple to set up, operate, and scale PostgreSQL deployments in the cloud. See Amazon RDS for PostgreSQL Pricing for pricing details and regional availability. Create or update a fully managed Amazon RDS database in the Amazon RDS Management Console.
Announcing general availability of auto-copy for Amazon Redshift in the GovCloud (US) Regions
Amazon Redshift announces the general availability of auto-copy, which simplifies data ingestion from Amazon S3 into Amazon Redshift in the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions. This new feature enables you to set up continuous file ingestion from your Amazon S3 prefix and automatically load new files to tables in your Amazon Redshift data warehouse without the need for additional tools or custom solutions.\n Previously, Amazon Redshift customers had to build their data pipelines using COPY commands to automate continuous loading of data from S3 to Amazon Redshift tables. With auto-copy, you can now setup an integration which will automatically detect and load new files in a specified S3 prefix to Redshift tables. The auto-copy jobs keep track of previously loaded files and exclude them from the ingestion process. You can monitor auto-copy jobs using system tables Amazon Redshift auto-copy from Amazon S3 is now generally available for both Amazon Redshift Serverless and Amazon Redshift RA3 Provisioned data warehouses in the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions. To learn more, see the documentation or check out the AWS Blog.
Amazon OpenSearch Service adds support for r7gd instances in six additional regions
Amazon OpenSearch Service now adds support for Graviton3 based r7gd instances with local NVMe-based SSD storage in six additional regions i.e., Asia Pacific (Hong Kong), Asia Pacific (Jakarta), Asia Pacific (Malaysia), Middle East (UAE), AWS GovCloud (US-East) and AWS GovCloud (US-West). AWS Graviton3-based instances with local NVMe-based SSD storage have up to 45% improved real-time NVMe storage performance compared to comparable Graviton2-based instances.\n Graviton3 based r7gd instances have custom-designed processors that enable improved performance for memory-intensive workloads. They offer upto 30 Gbps enhanced networking bandwidth and up to 20 Gbps of bandwidth to the Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS). Amazon OpenSearch Service Graviton3 instances are supported on all OpenSearch versions, and Elasticsearch versions 7.9 and 7.10. Please refer to the Amazon OpenSearch Service pricing page for additional information about instance types supported in different regions and their On-Demand and Reserved Instance pricing details. To learn more about Amazon OpenSearch Service, please visit the product page.
Amazon Bedrock Guardrails now supports additional languages - Spanish and French
Amazon Bedrock Guardrails enable you to implement safeguards for your generative AI applications based on your use cases and responsible AI policies. Starting today, we are excited to announce that Amazon Bedrock Guardrails adds multilingual capabilities with support for Spanish and French languages.\n Amazon Bedrock Guardrails help you implement safeguards for building safe, generative AI applications by filtering undesirable content, redacting personally identifiable information (PII), and enhancing content safety and privacy. You can configure policies for content filters, denied topics, word filters, PII redaction, and contextual grounding checks to tailor safeguards to your specific use cases and responsible AI policies. With support for Spanish and French languages, a wider set of users in multiple geographies can now use Bedrock Guardrails to build safer generative AI applications based on their use cases and responsible AI policies. To learn more about Amazon Bedrock Guardrails, see the product page and the technical documentation.
Amazon EC2 F2 instances, featuring up to 8 FPGAs, are generally available
Today, AWS announces the general availability of Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) F2 instances, featuring up to 8 FPGAs. Amazon EC2 F2 instances, the second-generation FPGA-powered instances, are purpose built to develop and deploy reconfigurable hardware in the cloud.\n You can use F2 instances to power the next generation of FPGA-accelerated solutions in genomics, multimedia processing, big data, network security/acceleration, and cloud-based video broadcasting. F2 instances are the first FPGA-based instances to feature 16GB of high-bandwidth memory. F2 instances provide up to 8 FPGAs paired with a 3rd generation AMD EPYC (Milan) processor with 3x processor cores (192 vCPU), 2x system memory (2 TiB), 2x NVMe SSD (7.6 TiB), and 4x networking bandwidth (100 Gbps) compared to F1 instances. F2 instances are now available in the US East (N.Virginia) and Europe (London) AWS Regions in f2.12xl, and f2.48xl sizes. To learn more about F2 instances, see Amazon EC2 F2 Instances.
Research and Engineering Studio on AWS Version 2024.12 now available
Today we’re excited to announce Research and Engineering Studio (RES) on AWS Version 2024.12. This release makes it possible to configure your Active Directory (AD) dynamically at runtime, allows Amazon Cognito users to launch Linux virtual desktops, and gives administrators the option to configure SSH access to virtual desktop infrastructure (VDI).\n RES administrators can now manage AD parameters and enable Cognito users through the RES UI in the new Identity Management page. AD parameters that were once required when deploying RES are now optional and can be changed at any time after deployment. Admins can also add LDAP filters for users and groups to be more targeted about what AD identities get synced to RES. Cognito can now be used as an identity source and login method to either augment or replace the existing Active Directory and Single Sign-On (SSO) authentication. Cognito users can access Linux VDI sessions in the RES environment just like users that access the environment through SSO. Add Cognito users to RES by manually adding them to the RES Cognito User Pool or activating user self registration from the RES UI. This release also gives administrators control over SSH access in the RES environment. SSH access to VDI sessions is now deactivated by default and can be reactivated at any time from the Permission Policy page. See the regional availability page for the list of regions where RES is available. Check out additional release notes on Github to get started and deploy RES 2024.12.
AWS Toolkit for Visual Studio Code now includes Amazon CloudWatch Logs Live Tail
AWS Toolkit for Visual Studio Code now includes Amazon CloudWatch Logs Live Tail, an interactive log streaming and analytics capability which provides real-time visibility into your logs, making it easier to develop and troubleshoot your serverless applications.\n The Toolkit for VS Code is an open-source extension for the Visual Studio Code (VS Code) editor. This extension makes it easier for developers to develop, debug locally, and deploy serverless applications that use AWS. This new integration brings the power of Live Tail directly into the VS Code Command Palette. CloudWatch log events can now be streamed in the VS Code Editor as they are ingested in real-time. You can search, filter, and highlight log events of interest, to aid and accelerate troubleshooting, investigations, and root cause analysis. Amazon CloudWatch Logs Live Tail for AWS Toolkit for Visual Studio Code is available in all AWS Commercial regions. To learn more, please visit the documentation. For pricing details, check Amazon CloudWatch Pricing.
AWS Backup expands cross-account management in opt-in Regions
Today, AWS Backup is announcing expanded regional coverage for cross-account management in opt-in Regions (Regions that are disabled by default). Cross-account management helps customers manage and monitor backups across their AWS accounts with AWS Organizations.\n With cross-account management in AWS Backup, customers can deploy an organization-wide backup policy using their AWS Organizations’ management account or delegated administrator account, and help maintain compliance across all organizational accounts while reducing account management overhead. Cross-account monitoring allows you to monitor backup activity across all the accounts in your organization from the management account. For more information on AWS Backup cross-account management, visit the documentation. Get started with AWS Backup today.
Amazon Connect now supports holiday overrides for Hours of operation
You can now configure holidays and other variances to your contact center Hours of operation with “overrides” in Amazon Connect, using APIs or the admin website. Overrides are exceptions to your contact center’s standard day-of-the-week operating hours. For example, if your contact center opens at 9am and closes at 10pm, but on New Year’s Eve you want to close at 4pm to allow your agents to get home in time to celebrate, you can add an override to do so. When the holiday arrives and you close your contact center early, callers get the after hours customer experience.\n Hours of operations overrides are supported in all AWS regions where Amazon Connect is offered. To learn more about Amazon Connect, the AWS cloud-based contact center, please visit the Amazon Connect website. To learn more about the hours of operations, see the Amazon Connect Administrator Guide.
AWS Blogs
AWS Japan Blog (Japanese)
- Amazon SageMaker Lakehouse unified access control is now available for Amazon Athena federated queries
- Amazon SageMaker Lakehouse and Amazon Redshift support zero ETL integration from applications
- Simplify analytics and AI/ML with the new Amazon SageMaker Lakehouse
- Zero ETL integration with Amazon SageMaker Lakehouse for new Amazon DynamoDB
- Use Amazon SageMaker data and AI governance to securely discover, manage, and collaborate on data and AI
- Announcement of the general availability of data lineage in the next generation Amazon SageMaker and Amazon DataZone
- Introducing the next generation of Amazon SageMaker: Where all your data, analytics, and AI come together
- Amazon Q Business Adds New Workflow Automation Features and 50+ Action Integrations
- ISVs enhance their generative AI experience with new Amazon Q Business features
- New Amazon Q Developer Agent features including documentation creation, code reviews, unit testing, and more
AWS Japan Startup Blog (Japanese)
AWS Cloud Operations Blog
- Using Terraform with Landing Zone Accelerator on AWS
- Detect and respond to security threats in near real-time using Amazon Managed Grafana
AWS Big Data Blog
- Building end-to-end data lineage for one-time and complex queries using Amazon Athena, Amazon Redshift, Amazon Neptune and dbt
- Accelerate Amazon Redshift secure data use with Satori – Part 2
AWS Compute Blog
AWS Database Blog
AWS Machine Learning Blog
- Accelerate your ML lifecycle using the new and improved Amazon SageMaker Python SDK – Part 2: ModelBuilder
- Accelerate your ML lifecycle using the new and improved Amazon SageMaker Python SDK – Part 1: ModelTrainer
- Amazon Q Apps supports customization and governance of generative AI-powered apps
- Answer questions from tables embedded in documents with Amazon Q Business
AWS for M&E Blog
Networking & Content Delivery
AWS Security Blog
Open Source Project
AWS CLI
AWS CDK
AWS Chalice
Amplify for JavaScript
- tsc-compliance-test@0.1.68
- aws-amplify@6.10.3
- @aws-amplify/storage@6.7.4
- @aws-amplify/pubsub@6.1.38
- @aws-amplify/predictions@6.1.38
- @aws-amplify/notifications@2.0.63
- @aws-amplify/interactions@6.1.4
- @aws-amplify/geo@3.0.63
- @aws-amplify/datastore-storage-adapter@2.1.65
- @aws-amplify/datastore@5.0.65