• Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io
No Result
View All Result
Converge Digest
Friday, May 29, 2026
  • Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io
No Result
View All Result
Converge Digest
No Result
View All Result

Home » Amazon Web Services Positions Itself as the Infrastructure of Innovation

Amazon Web Services Positions Itself as the Infrastructure of Innovation

November 28, 2012
in All, Clouds and Carriers
A A

Amazon Web Services is growing rapidly thanks to a virtuous circle — as it gains more customers there is greater server usage, this means AWS needs to build more infrastructure, which then leads to greater economies of scale, the company benefits from lower infrastructure costs, it reduces prices and this attracts even more customers.  This virtuous cycle is currently in full motion, giving AWS a strategic advantage over others who were late to enter the market, said Andy Jassy in a keynote at the company’s first AWS re:Invent conference in Las Vegas.  The company has lowered prices 23 times since launching cloud services in 2006 largely without competitive pressure to do so. The latest price cut: AWS is lowering its S3 cloud storage service by 25%.

Jassy said Amazon is injecting new energy into its virtuous circle flywheel by adding services/features and opening up to third party integrators, network solution providers and app vendors.  This propels AWS forward to be the “infrastructure for innovation.”

Here is current snapshot of AWS

  • 100s of thousands of customers using its cloud services
  • Over 300 government agencies and 1,500 academic institutions
  • AWS has introduced over 150 new cloud services or features during 2012
  • Amazon’s S3 storage service is currently holding over 1.3 trillion objects and handling peak loads of 835,000 requests per second
  • The Amazon Elastic Map Reduce service (Hadoop running on EC2) has now launched 3.7 million clusters
  • In 2003, Amazon.com’s retail business generated $5.2 billion in revenue. Now, AWS adds enough server capacity every day to power the entire operations of the 2003 retail business
  • AWS Global Infrastructure now encompasses 9 regions(US East, two US West coast, Europre, Brazil, Tokyo, Singapore, Sydney) 25 availability zones and 38 edge locations. There is as a separate U.S. government AWS cloud

Jassy’s keynote, along with partner presentations from NASA, Netflix, NASDAQ and SAP, is now on YouTube.

http://youtu.be/8FJ5DBLSFe4

http://aws.amazon.com/live/

Tags: AWSBlueprint columnsConference
ShareTweetShareSummarizeSummarize
Previous Post

Amazon’s Redshift Brings Data Analysis and Warehousing to Cloud

Next Post

CenturyLink Names Jeff Von Deylen President of Savvis

Staff

Staff

Related Posts

Clouds and Carriers

Vodafone and AWS Expand Sovereign Cloud Services for Germany

May 11, 2026
Financials

Amazon Q1 2026: AWS Surges 28% as Custom AI Chips Top $20B Run Rate

April 29, 2026
Semiconductors

Meta Deploys Tens of Millions of AWS Graviton5 Cores

April 26, 2026
AI Infrastructure

Oracle and AWS Link Clouds with Private Interconnect for AI Workloads

April 16, 2026
AI Infrastructure

Amazon Ties $200 Billion 2026 Capex Plan to AI, AWS, and Custom Silicon

April 9, 2026
AI Infrastructure

Amazon Commits €33.7B to Expand Data Centers in Spain

March 3, 2026
Next Post

CenturyLink Names Jeff Von Deylen President of Savvis

Please login to join discussion

Categories

  • 5G / 6G / Wi-Fi
  • AI Infrastructure
  • All
  • Automotive Networking
  • Blueprints
  • Clouds and Carriers
  • Data Centers
  • Enterprise
  • Explainer
  • Feature
  • Financials
  • Last Mile / Middle Mile
  • Legal / Regulatory
  • Optical
  • Quantum
  • Research
  • Security
  • Semiconductors
  • Space
  • Start-ups
  • Subsea
  • Sustainability
  • Video
  • Webinars

Archives

Tags

5G All AT&T Australia AWS Blueprint columns BroadbandWireless Broadcom China Ciena Cisco Data Centers Dell'Oro Ericsson FCC Financial Financials Huawei Infinera Intel Japan Juniper Last Mile Last Mille LTE Mergers and Acquisitions Mobile NFV Nokia Optical Packet Systems PacketVoice People Regulatory Satellite SDN Service Providers Silicon Silicon Valley StandardsWatch Storage TTP UK Verizon Wi-Fi
Converge Digest

A private dossier for networking and telecoms

Follow Us

  • Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io

© 2026 Converge Digest - A private dossier for networking and telecoms.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • About
  • Events Calendar
  • Blueprint Guidelines
  • Privacy Policy
  • Manage Email Delivery
  • NextGenInfra.io

© 2026 Converge Digest - A private dossier for networking and telecoms.

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.
Go to mobile version