4/1/2025, 12:00:00 AM ~ 4/2/2025, 12:00:00 AM (UTC)

Recent Announcements

Amazon QuickSight launches dashboard versioning and publish any analysis to any dashboard

Amazon QuickSight launches dashboard versioning and the ability to publish any analysis to replace any dashboard to improve author productivity. Dashboard versioning enables authors to view and easily re-publish previously published versions of their dashboards as well as the notes on what updates were made by whom. Publishing any analysis to any dashboard means that authors don’t have to replace a dashboard with the analysis that it started from, but can use any other analysis in the account.\n With the launch of these two features, authors can build new analyses with updates and then publish them to the existing dashboard that readers already have bookmarked. Authors don’t have to send out new links and depreciate old versions. In addition, if any issue arises from a new dashboard version, authors have the ability to revert to previous versions of the dashboard so that they can keep the dashboard in a working state while they work on the necessary changes.

Publish any analysis to any dashboard and dashboard versioning are now available in all supported Amazon QuickSight regions - go to this link for QuickSight regional endpoints. For more details refer to documentation for publish any analysis to any dashboard or dashboard versioning.

Announcing the general availability seventh quarterly update for Amazon Linux 2023 (AL2023), AL2023.7

Amazon Linux now brings a Graphical Desktop, a new kernel option with Linux kernel 6.12, an upgraded OpenSSL to version 3.2.2, and addition of new high demand packages on AL2023.\n AL2023.7 offers a modern, secure, and cloud-optimized desktop environment to Amazon Linux users. The new Graphical Desktop provides a lightweight interface designed for productivity and seamless AWS integration. The Graphical Desktop comes with GNOME 47 for a sleek UI experience. It includes other essential tools like a terminal emulator for improved CLI experience, an image viewer, a text editor, a file manager for file navigation, and Mozilla Firefox for secure web browsing. Additionally, you can connect seamlessly using Amazon DCV, enabling remote desktop access from anywhere. The updated kernel 6.12 will help you get benefits from upstream improvements in scheduling, networking, security, and system tracing. Some of the features include EEVDF scheduling, FUSE passthrough I/O support, and enhanced eBPF support. In addition, OpenSSL has been upgraded which provides a significant performance upgrade. Finally, some of the most requested packages such as gcc14, nbd-client, nbdkit, and openDKIM will be available with AL2023.7, and this comes on the heels of recently released packages such as pam_radius, lldpad, and mod_auth_mellon. Please refer to the release notes for the latest features and packages getting added to Amazon Linux. Amazon Linux 2023 is generally available in all AWS Regions. To learn more about Amazon Linux 2023, see the AWS documentation. For Amazon DCV, please refer to the Amazon DCV documentation.

Second-generation Amazon FSx for NetApp ONTAP now available in additional EMEA and APAC Regions

Amazon FSx for NetApp ONTAP second-generation file systems are now available in 2 additional AWS Regions: Europe (Stockholm), and Asia Pacific (Singapore).\n Amazon FSx makes it easier and more cost effective to launch, run, and scale feature-rich high-performance file systems in the cloud. Second-generation FSx for ONTAP file systems give you more performance scalability and flexibility over first-generation file systems by allowing you to create or expand file systems with up to 12 highly-available (HA) pairs of file servers, providing your workloads with up to 72 GBps of throughput and 1 PiB of provisioned SSD storage. With this regional expansion, second-generation FSx for ONTAP file systems are available in the following AWS Regions: US East (N. Virginia, Ohio), US West (N. California, Oregon), Europe (Frankfurt, Ireland, Stockholm), and Asia Pacific (Singapore, Sydney). You can create second-generation Multi-AZ file systems with a single HA pair, and Single-AZ file systems with up to 12 HA pairs. To learn more, visit the FSx for ONTAP user guide.

AWS Marketplace now supports Japan Marketplace Facilitator Rule

Starting today, AWS Marketplace supports the Japan Marketplace Facilitator (MPF) rule, making it easier for Sellers to meet the Japanese regulatory requirements and providing a seamless tax experience for customers in Japan. Under the MPF rule, AWS Marketplace will collect the Japan consumption tax (JCT) and issue a tax qualified invoice (TQI) for sales by non-Japan addressed Independent Software Vendors (ISVs) and Channel Partners (together as non-Japan addressed Sellers) to customers in Japan. Also, AWS Marketplace will offer the same customer experience by enabling TQI issuance for sales by Japan-addressed ISVs and Channel Partners (together as Japan-addressed Sellers) to customers in Japan.\n With this launch, for non-Japan addressed Sellers, AWS Japan will collect the 10% JCT on products listed and sold on AWS Marketplace to Japan customers, issue a TQI to the customers, and remit the JCT to the Japan Tax Authorities. For Japan-addressed Sellers, AWS Japan will continue to collect 10% JCT on the products listed and sold on AWS Marketplace to Japan customers and disburse the collected JCT to the Japan-addressed Sellers; additionally, AWS Japan will issue a TQI to the customers. The TQI issuance helps customers reduce the administrative burden for managing tax documentation. This feature is available for all Sellers when transacting via the AWS Japan Marketplace Operator. To learn more, please visit the AWS Japan FAQ or AWS Marketplace Seller Guide.

AWS CodeBuild expands on-demand Windows fleets to 4 more AWS Regions

AWS CodeBuild now supports on-demand Windows build environments in four additional AWS Regions: South America (São Paulo), Asia Pacific (Tokyo), Asia Pacific (Sydney), and Europe (Frankfurt). The expansion allows customers in these AWS Regions to run Windows-based workloads with the flexibility of on-demand pricing. AWS CodeBuild is a fully managed continuous integration service that compiles source code, runs tests, and produces software packages ready for deployment.\n Additionally, CodeBuild Windows build environment now supports non-container builds, enabling you to run build commands directly on the host operating system without containerization. You can also configure your builds to build docker images in Windows environment. CodeBuild on-demand Windows environment is available in US East (N. Virginia), US East (Ohio), US West (Oregon), Europe (Ireland), South America (São Paulo), Asia Pacific (Tokyo), Asia Pacific (Sydney), and Europe (Frankfurt). To learn more about CodeBuild build environment, please visit our documentation. To learn more about how to get started with CodeBuild, visit the AWS CodeBuild product page.

Amazon QuickSight launches Amazon Q in embedded QuickSight

Amazon Q in QuickSight is now generally available in embedded dashboards and console. The Generative BI capabilities of Amazon Q in QuickSight help business analysts and business users easily build and consume insights using natural language.\n With executive summaries, users of embedded dashboards can quickly grasp essential insights from any dashboard in seconds. Dashboard-authoring capabilities empower your users to build interactive dashboards more easily than ever, leveraging natural language to generate visuals and perform complex calculations with ease. With just a few lines of code, developers can integrate Generative BI capabilities into their applications by embedding the new multi-visual Q&A experience—enabling end users to confidently explore and answer questions from data. Users can prompt Amazon Q using a few words to generate a sharable document or presentation in moments that explains data, extracts key insights and visuals, and recommends best actions to improve your business. These Amazon Q capabilities in embedded dashboards and console are now generally available in the US East (N. Virginia), US West (Oregon), Europe (Ireland, Frankfurt, London), Asia Pacific (Mumbai and Sydney ), Canada (Central) and South America (São Paulo) AWS Regions. To learn more about Amazon Q in embedded QuickSight see the AWS Business Intelligence Blog and try Amazon QuickSight free for 30 days.

AWS Resource Explorer supports 32 new resource types

AWS Resource Explorer now supports 32 more resource types across all AWS commercial Regions from services including Amazon API Gateway, AWS CloudTrail, and Amazon CloudFront.\n With this release, customers can now search for the following resource types in AWS Resource Explorer:

  1. apigateway:vpclinks

  2. appconfig:application

  3. appconfig:deploymentstrategy

  4. backup:report-plan

  5. ce:anomalymonitor

  6. ce:anomalysubscription

  7. cloudfront:continuous-deployment-policy

  8. cloudtrail:channel

  9. codedeploy:application

  10. codedeploy:deploymentconfig

  11. events:archive

  12. events:endpoint

  13. gamelift:location

  14. groundstation:mission-profile

  15. inspector:target/template

  16. iot:cacert

  17. iot:cert

  18. iotdeviceadvisor:suitedefinition

  19. iotfleetwise:decoder-manifest

  20. iotfleetwise:model-manifest

  21. iotfleetwise:signal-catalog

  22. managedblockchain:accessors

  23. oam:sink

  24. omics:referenceStore

  25. omics:runGroup

  26. omics:workflow

  27. personalize:solution

  28. pipes:pipe

  29. scheduler:schedule-group

  30. schemas:discoverer

  31. transfer:certificate

  32. transfer:connector

To view a complete list of all supported types, see the supported resource types page.

AWS Automates VAT and supports Korean Won for South Korea AWS Marketplace customers

Amazon Web Services Korea LLC (AWS Korea) is now facilitating AWS Marketplace transactions for customers with AWS accounts in South Korea. AWS Korea enhances the purchasing experience by automatically including applicable Value Added Tax (VAT) on invoices and allowing payments in Korean Won (KRW) for AWS Marketplace purchases. Independent software vendors (ISVs) and Channel Partners from South Korea are now eligible to sell software in AWS Marketplace.\n Customers can now directly procure software from South Korean ISVs, and can pay for purchases using wire transfers in either KRW or US Dollars (USD), or by using credit cards in KRW only. Purchases can also be made through local Channel Partners in South Korea, allowing customers to benefit from local relationships, expertise, and support. AWS Korea manages VAT obligations for all transactions, including those between ISVs and Channel Partners. AWS Korea automates VAT collection and invoicing for all third-party product purchases, except Amazon Bedrock products. AWS, Inc. will continue to be the contracting party for purchases of AWS services and Amazon Bedrock offerings. Customers can now purchase software from South Korean ISVs such as Saltlux, Hackle, Superb AI, and Neosapience, and from Channel Partners such as MegazoneCloud, LG CNS, BespinGlobal, and SK C&C. For sellers, an additional regional listing fee of 1% will be applied to the standard AWS Marketplace listing fees for their transactions with Korean buyers. For more information, visit the AWS Korea FAQs, the AWS Marketplace Buyer Guide or the Seller Guide.

AWS End User Messaging expands self-service for phone number registration support in 18 new countries

Today, AWS End User Messaging launched self-service short code, and long code registration for 18 additional countries, helping developers to onboard to dedicated numbers which enables them to correctly configure SMS messaging for their applications. The new countries supported for long codes include Australia, Austria, Chile, Denmark, Finland, Hong Kong, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Spain, Sweden, United Kingdom, Hungary, and Portugal. The new countries supported for short codes include Chile, Finland, Germany, India, Netherlands, Spain, United Kingdom, and United States.\n Phone numbers and sender IDs act as an extension of a business’s brand, and mobile carriers and governments worldwide have implemented SMS registrations as a form of “know your customer” check to protect end-users from unwanted and spam messages. By registering, application developers ensure a higher level of deliverability and ensure their use-cases comply with local rules and regulations, avoiding message filtering. Previously, customers needed to open a support case to request these short code and long code forms, but now they can self-service via the AWS Management Console or programmatically via the APIs, saving time-to-onboard. The registration support is available in all commercial regions where AWS End User Messaging is generally available.

AWS Payment Cryptography launches support for exchanging cryptographic keys using ECDH

AWS Payment Cryptography now supports exchanging cryptographic keys using Elliptic-curve Diffie–Hellman (ECDH). With this new feature, customers now have a method to electronically exchange keys up to 256 bits in strength. These capabilities bring more flexibility in addition to existing support for industry norms such as TR-34 and TR-31/X9.143. With AWS Payment Cryptography, you can simplify cryptography operations in your cloud-hosted payment applications with a service that grows elastically with your business and has been assessed as compliant with PCI PIN Security and Point-to-Point Encryption (P2PE) requirements.\n While payment processing has traditionally relied on TDES (Triple DES) encryption schemes, customers have shown a greater interest in moving to the more secure AES (Advanced Encryption Standard) standard including the 256-bit option. With this feature, AWS Payment Cryptography provides an interoperable method to exchange any key supported by the service with a customers on-premise HSM, providing a secure method of key synchronization and migration. ECDH can also be used when transferring keys to mobile payment applications such as those certified under the PCI MPoC (Mobile Payments on Commercial-off-the-shelf devices) standard. This removes the risks and hassle of manual processes and makes it easier to upgrade to the latest cryptographic standards. These features are available in all AWS Regions where AWS Payment Cryptography is available. For detailed information and samples for utilizing the new key exchange features, please download the latest AWS CLI/SDK and review importing and exporting keys in the AWS Payment Cryptography Developer Guide.

AWS App Studio introduces a prebuilt solutions catalog and cross-instance Import and Export

Today, AWS App Studio announces two new capabilities that accelerate enterprise application building from idea to production. App Studio now offers a prebuilt solutions catalog and application Import and Export, enabling users to get started quickly and easily deploy applications across Regions and AWS accounts.\n App Studio’s prebuilt solutions catalog offers a variety of ready-to-use applications and common patterns (like Amazon S3 and Amazon Bedrock integration) that can be seamlessly imported into any App Studio instance. Customers can explore and deploy these applications to their own instances, significantly reducing initial setup time and move from concept to production instances in less than 15 minutes. These new capabilities are now available in all AWS Regions where AWS App Studio is available, including US West (Oregon) and Europe (Ireland). To learn more about App Studio, visit the AWS App Studio page and join the conversation in the #aws-app-studio channel in the AWS Developers Slack workspace. To explore App Studio’s prebuilt solutions catalog and Import and Export capabilities, visit the blog post. There is no charge for building and managing your App Studio applications. Get started by visiting the AWS Management Console.

Amazon Connect now supports additional Dual-Tone Multi-Frequency (DTMF) configuration settings

Amazon Connect now allows you to customize the number of seconds which the system will wait between a caller’s keypad button presses so you can optimize user inputs in your Interactive Voice Response (IVR) systems. Administrators can now adjust this waiting period from 1 to 20 seconds, which was previously fixed at 5 seconds. For example, in a banking IVR flow, you can now set a longer inter-digit timeout for account number entry benefitting customers who may need more time between pressing digits. Additionally, two existing settings, Maximum Digits and Timeout Before First Entry, can now be set dynamically using variables, giving administrators more flexibility in designing IVR flows. This added flexibility allows you to optimize your IVR systems for specific use cases, improving user experience and system efficiency.\n To learn more refer to our public documentation. This new feature is available in all AWS regions where Amazon Connect is available. To learn more about Amazon Connect, the AWS contact center as a service solution on the cloud, please visit the Amazon Connect website.

Announcing the general availability of Amazon VPC Route Server

AWS announces the general availability of VPC Route Server to simplify dynamic routing between virtual appliances in your Amazon VPC. Route Server allows you to advertise routing information through Border Gateway Protocol (BGP) from virtual appliances and dynamically update the VPC route tables associated with subnets and internet gateway.\n Prior to this feature, you had to create custom scripts or use virtual routers with overlay network to dynamically update VPC route tables. VPC Route Server removes the operational overhead of creating and maintaining overlay networks or custom scripts and offers a managed solution for dynamically updating routes in route tables. With VPC Route Server, you can deploy endpoints in your VPC and peer them with your virtual appliances to advertise routes using BGP. The Route Server filters these received routes using standard BGP attributes and propagates the selected routes to the specified route tables. This makes it easy for you to dynamically update routes and quickly mitigate appliance failure or other issues. VPC Route Server is available in US East (Virginia), US East (Ohio), US West (Oregon), Europe (Ireland), Europe (Frankfurt) and Asia Pacific (Tokyo) AWS Regions. For more information, see the VPC Route Server documentation.

Amazon Connect now shows an agent’s adherence to their work schedules in a calendar view

Now Amazon Connect makes it easy for supervisors to monitor agents’ adherence to their schedules in a calendar view. With this launch, supervisors can visualize adherence breaches by agent and day, for up to 90 days in the past alongside their shifts, including the ability to filter out minimal adherence breaches. This visualization allows supervisors to immediately spot adherence breaches across their team, prioritize the most critical incidents, compare with past agent behavior, and take steps to address concerns with the agent. For example, if a supervisor notices a pattern of agents consistently running late to work after breaks or lunches, they can investigate further to determine if there are underlying issues such as network problems, equipment issues, or expectations of timeliness that need to be addressed.\n This feature is available in all AWS Regions where Amazon Connect agent scheduling is available. To learn more and get started, visit the Amazon Connect agent scheduling guide for a overview of this feature.

Amazon QuickSight now supports Highlighting

Amazon QuickSight launches highlighting, a new interaction capability for analysis and dashboards. Highlighting allows authors and readers to emphasize and track specific data points across visuals, making it easier to compare data elements throughout a sheet and explore insights more effectively.\n With highlighting, simply select or hover over a data point in a visual, and related data across other visuals will stand out, while unrelated data is dimmed or greyed out. This seamless interaction helps users understand correlations, spot patterns, trends and outliers, facilitating faster and more informed analysis. Highlighting is now available in all supported Amazon QuickSight regions - see here for QuickSight regional endpoints. This can be turned on under Analysis or Sheet Settings. For more details refer to documentation for analysis settings or sheet settings.

AWS Backup introduces support for Amazon Redshift Serverless

AWS announces support for Amazon Redshift Serverless in AWS Backup, making it easier for you to centrally manage data protection of your Amazon Redshift Serverless data warehouse. You can now use AWS Backup to automate backup and restore of both Amazon Redshift Serverless and Amazon Redshift provisioned cluster snapshots, along with other AWS services for compute, storage, and database. Using AWS Backup’s integration with AWS Organizations, you can centrally create and manage immutable backups across all your accounts, standardizing data protection across your organization.\n To get started with AWS Backup for Amazon Redshift Serverless, you can use the AWS Backup Management console, API, or CLI to create backup policies. You assign Amazon Redshift Serverless resources to the policies, and AWS Backup automates the creation of backups of Amazon Redshift Serverless data warehouses. You can restore Amazon Redshift Serverless namespace or individual Amazon Redshift tables from your backup vault with a few clicks or with a single API call. AWS Backup support for Amazon Redshift Serverless is available in all the regions where Amazon Redshift Serverless is already available today. To learn more about AWS Backup support for Amazon Redshift Serverless, visit the AWS Backup product page and documentation.

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AWS for M&E Blog

AWS Messaging & Targeting Blog

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