Confidential computing: an AWS perspective

By Dustin Ward

AWS FeedConfidential computing: an AWS perspective Customers around the globe—from governments and highly regulated industries to small businesses and start-ups—trust Amazon Web Services (AWS) with their most sensitive data and applications. At AWS, keeping our customers’ workloads secure and confidential, while helping them meet their privacy and data sovereignty requirements, is our highest priority. Our…

Amazon Transcribe now supports resource tagging for better access control

By Dustin Ward

AWS FeedAmazon Transcribe now supports resource tagging for better access control Amazon Transcribe is an automatic speech recognition (ASR) service that makes it easy for you to add speech-to-text capabilities to your applications. Starting today, you can assign tags to easily organize, track, or control access your resources. This can be used to allocate costs or…

Access an Amazon SageMaker Studio notebook from a corporate network

By Dustin Ward

AWS FeedAccess an Amazon SageMaker Studio notebook from a corporate network Amazon SageMaker Studio is the first fully integrated development environment (IDE) for machine learning. It provides a single, web-based visual interface where you can perform all ML development steps required to build, train, and deploy models. You can quickly upload data, create new notebooks,…

Run a Spark SQL-based ETL pipeline with Amazon EMR on Amazon EKS

By Dustin Ward

AWS FeedRun a Spark SQL-based ETL pipeline with Amazon EMR on Amazon EKS This blog post has been translated into the following languages: Spanish Portuguese Increasingly, a business’s success depends on its agility in transforming data into actionable insights, which requires efficient and automated data processes. In the previous post – Build a SQL-based ETL…

Building well-architected serverless applications: Optimizing application performance – part 2

By Dustin Ward

AWS FeedBuilding well-architected serverless applications: Optimizing application performance – part 2 This series of blog posts uses the AWS Well-Architected Tool with the Serverless Lens to help customers build and operate applications using best practices. In each post, I address the serverless-specific questions identified by the Serverless Lens along with the recommended best practices. See the introduction post for a table…