Amazon
Web Services, Inc. (AWS)
announced the completion of its first 16 AWS Local Zones in the U.S. and
plans to launch new AWS Local Zones in 32 new metropolitan areas in 26
countries around the world. AWS Local Zones are a type of infrastructure
deployment that extends AWS Regions to place compute, storage,
database, and other AWS services at the edge of the cloud near large
population, industry, and information technology (IT) centers-enabling
customers to deploy applications that require single-digit millisecond
latency closer to end users or on-premises data centers. AWS Local Zones
allow customers to use core AWS services locally while seamlessly
connecting to the rest of their workloads running in AWS Regions with
the same elasticity, pay-as-you-go model, application programming
interfaces (APIs), and toolsets. To learn more about AWS Local Zones,
visit aws.amazon.com/about-aws/global-infrastructure/localzones.
The
vast majority of customers receive the necessary latency required to
support their applications' performance by running them in AWS Regions
(geographic locations around the world where AWS clusters data centers
to serve customers in local AWS Availability Zones). However, for
applications that require ultra-low latency (e.g., remote real-time
gaming, media and entertainment content creation, live video streaming,
engineering simulations, augmented and virtual reality, machine learning
inference at the edge, etc.), customers want AWS infrastructure closer
to their end users to support a seamless experience. Other customers
have local data residency requirements where they must run parts of
their applications in on-premises data centers, but they also want to
take advantage of AWS services and similarly benefit from the ultra-low
latency that AWS Local Zones can provide to these types of hybrid
applications. Both of these use cases would otherwise require customers
to procure, operate, and maintain IT infrastructure-and use a different
set of APIs and tools for the on-premises and AWS environments-which
creates unnecessary costs and operational complexity. Prior to today,
customers could use AWS Local Zones to deliver applications that require
single-digit millisecond latency in 16 cities in the U.S. (Atlanta,
Boston, Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Houston, Kansas City, Las Vegas, Los
Angeles, Miami, Minneapolis, New York City, Philadelphia, Phoenix,
Portland, and Seattle). However, customers in Africa, Asia Pacific,
Europe, Latin America, and the Middle East would also like to use AWS
Local Zones to deliver applications closer to end users and run hybrid
workloads near their data centers with single-digit millisecond
latencies around the world.
Over
the next two years, new AWS Local Zones will launch in Amsterdam,
Athens, Auckland, Bangkok, Bengaluru, Berlin, Bogotá, Brisbane,
Brussels, Buenos Aires, Chennai, Copenhagen, Delhi, Hanoi, Helsinki,
Johannesburg, Kolkata, Lima, Lisbon, Manila, Munich, Nairobi, Oslo,
Perth, Prague, Querétaro, Rio de Janeiro, Santiago, Toronto, Vancouver,
Vienna, and Warsaw. The new AWS Local Zones will give customers around
the world the ability to offer hundreds of millions of end users
single-digit millisecond performance for their applications. Using AWS
Local Zones, customers outside the U.S. have the ability to meet data
residency requirements in regulated sectors like health care and life
sciences, financial services, and government. AWS manages and supports
Local Zones, meaning customers do not need to incur the expense and
effort of procuring, operating, and maintaining infrastructure in
various cities to support low-latency applications. Customers can
connect to AWS Local Zones through an internet connection or use AWS
Direct Connect to route traffic over a private AWS network connection.
"The
edge of the cloud is expanding and is now becoming available virtually
everywhere," said Prasad Kalyanaraman, Vice President of Infrastructure
Services at AWS. "Thousands of AWS customers using U.S.-based AWS Local
Zones are able to optimize low-latency applications designed
specifically for their industries and the use cases of their customers.
With the success of our first Local Zones in 16 U.S. cities, we are
expanding to more locations for our customers around the world who have
asked for these same capabilities to push the edge of cloud services to
new places. AWS Local Zones will now be available in over 30 new
locations globally, providing customers with a powerful new capability
to leverage cloud services within a few milliseconds of hundreds of
millions of end users around the world."
Netflix
is one of the world's leading entertainment services with 214 million
paid memberships in over 190 countries for TV series, documentaries, and
feature films across a wide variety of genres and languages. "Netflix
is poised to become one of the world's most prolific producers of visual
effects and original animated content. To meet that demand, we are
hiring the best artistic talent from all over the world. These artists
need specialized hardware and access to petabytes of images to create
stunning visual effects and animations," said Stephen Kowalski, Director
of Digital Production Infrastructure Engineering at Netflix.
"Historically, artists had specialized machines built for them at their
desks; now, we are working to move their workstations to AWS to take
advantage of the cloud. In order to provide a good working experience
for our artists, they need low latency access to their virtual
workstations. AWS Local Zones brings cloud resources closer to our
artists and have been a game changer for these applications. By taking
advantage of AWS Local Zones, we have migrated a portion of our content
creation process to AWS while ensuring an even better experience for
artists. We are excited about the expansion of AWS Local Zones globally,
which brings cloud resources closer to creators, allowing artists to
get to work anywhere in the world and create without boundaries."
Couchbase
delivers the modern database for enterprise applications. Developers
worldwide choose Couchbase for its advantages in data model flexibility,
elastic scalability, performance, and 24x365 availability to build
business-critical web, mobile, and IoT applications. "The database is
just as critical to edge computing as the infrastructure and network.
Apps that are stateful and need to store data require a modern database.
And that database needs to be able to operate and synchronize across
the entire architecture, not just on a single edge device or endpoint,"
said Wayne Carter, Vice President of Engineering at Couchbase.
"Couchbase is using AWS Local Zones to provide low latency and
single-digit millisecond database access times for applications,
ensuring developers' apps are always available and fast. Using AWS Local
Zones, along with Couchbase's edge computing capabilities, means that
our customers are able to store, query, search, and analyze data in
real-time with high availability."
Finland-based
Supercell is one of the most recognized mobile game developers in the
world. Since its founding in 2010, Supercell has brought five
chart-topping games to the market: Hay Day, Clash of Clans, Boom Beach, Clash Royale, and Brawl Stars.
"Our player base has scaled at an incredible pace, and we have relied
on AWS to manage our infrastructure and match our growth. We deploy game
servers in multiple AWS Regions today to serve our end users globally
and evaluate all new Regions as they come online," said Juho Mäkinen,
Lead of Infrastructure and Services at Supercell. "We are also using AWS
Local Zones as deployment targets in the U.S., and we are considering
additional Local Zones as they become available in order to bring the
latency-sensitive portions of game servers closer to more end users."
The
FOX Corporation creates and distributes some of the most compelling
entertainment, sports, and news content in the industry, through its
iconic domestic brands including FOX Entertainment, FOX Sports, FOX News
Media, and the network of FOX television stations. "Home to exceptional
artists, it's our mission to find and leverage technology which removes
any friction or barrier from the creative process, allowing our
storytellers to focus solely on the content, not the way it's created,"
said Christian Kennel, Vice President Post and Production Technology at
FOX Entertainment. "With AWS Local Zones in close proximity to our
production hubs, shoots, and the famed FOX lot, we're able to deliver
cloud resources directly to our artists, allowing them to craft their
vision without the limitations of traditional remote solutions. Creative
workflows like editorial, motion graphics, and finishing demand
ultra-low latency, and AWS represents the best of breed solution that
FOX has come to rely upon. Integrating AWS into the FOX workflow enables
us to execute and deploy much faster, taking us closer to the goal of
allowing artists to create from the field, the home, or the lot, with
seamless access to every resource necessary to create the award-winning
content for which FOX is known.
Ubitus
is a cloud gaming technology leader that offers turnkey solutions to
help customers build their cloud game businesses. "Today, we use AWS
Local Zones in the U.S. to provide players a consistent, low-latency
gameplay experience, and it has transformed the way we deliver service
to our customers," said Wesley Kuo, CEO at Ubitus. "With AWS Local
Zones, we can deploy and test clusters of game servers in cities across
the world to ensure all customers get a great experience regardless of
where they are located. AWS Local Zones is reinforcing Ubitus's cloud
game services, and its expansion to more cities helps us deliver the
low-latency gaming experience our customers want and expect."
JackTrip
Labs leverages edge computing technologies to bring live music over the
internet to patrons everywhere. When performing music over the
internet, low audio latency between performers is critical for a smooth
experience. "JackTrip is using AWS Local Zones to run low-latency audio
servers closer to musicians, enabling musicians to perform live music
together over the internet," said Mike Dickey, CEO at JackTrip Labs.
"With the expansion of AWS Local Zones to more than 30 cities around the
world, we are able to provide more robust, high-fidelity interactions
for more musicians around the world to connect with audiences anywhere."
Edgegap
is a leading game hosting service provider focused on delivering the
best online experience for players. "Providing the best online
experience to our players logging in from all over the world is our
competitive advantage. High or unstable latency is detrimental to our
end-user experience and ultimately to revenue in gaming," said Mathieu
Duperré, CEO at Edgegap Technologies. "With AWS Local Zones, Edgegap can
now deploy even closer to where the players are, elevating their gaming
experience to new heights. This means our clients like Die by the Blade game
maker, Triple Hill Interactive, can successfully run a one-versus-one
global tournament online, or the makers of fast-paced arena shooter Brutal Grounds, Agog, can now provide a fair environment for every gamer anywhere."
JamKazam
is proprietary networked music performance software that enables
real-time rehearsing, jamming, and performing with musicians at remote
locations, overcoming latency. "Playing music live and in sync over the
internet requires extremely low latency between musicians. Every
millisecond counts," said Seth Call, Co-founder and Director of
Engineering at JamKazam. "AWS Local Zones enable us to offer a solution
that lets musicians reliably play with each other with incredibly low
latency by providing a ‘shortcut' path across the internet. Without
exaggeration, this is the biggest opportunity for our company in years.
It's a boon to musicians who can stop spending hours traveling and
setting up and tearing down gear to instead spend their time rehearsing
and jamming anytime in less than five minutes online."
Esports
Engine is a turnkey esports solutions company working with gaming
publishers, rightsholders, brands, and teams to provide production,
broadcast, tournament, and program design. "In gaming production, low
latency matters and every millisecond counts. Having high-powered
computing available in proximity lets us quickly scale up our
productions as needed," said Ryan Thompson, Co-Founder and Chief
Production Officer at Esports Engine. "With AWS Local Zones, we're able
to deploy resources in more geographic locations across our multiple
studios. This has been integral to the success of our crew members who
are able to access cloud studio servers at such low latency that it
almost feels like they're using a computer locally."
Pre1.com
is a leading CRM/ad management software platform for the newspaper
industry. "Our clients have typically run their applications on local
hardware, but with the advent of COVID and the fast pace of social media
environments, the media world had to make a change to keep up," said
Don Bauernfeind, CEO at Pre1.com. "AWS Local Zones provided us with a
great solution that we could offer to our clients. We were able to move
their applications to the cloud with low latency and high stability. Our
clients reduced their local hardware support costs while improving
overall operational efficiency. Plus, it has made our life better from a
support perspective. We are constantly looking for ways to collaborate
with AWS to help us find a win-win for our clients and our team."
Masomo,
founded in 2015, is an interactive entertainment company transforming
the power of social in mobile games. "We deploy select portions of our
latency-sensitive game servers in various locations across the world in
order to reach the breadth of our end users with lower latency.
Providing end-users with low-latency gameplay is an important part of
ensuring fairness and consistent player experience," said Oğuzhan
Yilmaz, CTO at Masomo. "With AWS Local Zones, we get the single-digit
millisecond latency and proximity in lots of cities across the country,
helping us improve end users' latency, reduce churn, and provide end
users with a great experience."