Amazon held its annual AWS (Amazon Web Services) Summit at the Javits Center in New York City on Wednesday. The event focused on the cloud computing giant’s latest work in generative artificial intelligence (AI), and featured partner expos, workshops, talks, and a keynote address.
Across all of its announcements, AWS emphasized accelerating developer productivity and making scalable generative AI available to more organizations. It also focused on security and responsibility, spotlighting its partnership with Anthropic.
During the Summit keynote address, Dr. Matt Wood, vice president for AI Products at AWS, noted that customers from regulated industries and the public sector grow fastest on AWS, because their compliance efforts set a strong foundation for generative AI. They are well prepared to meet security requirements at the beginning of their AI build. Wood reiterated that security is baked into AWS gen AI applications “from day one,” and that it’s the company’s highest priority.
Here are the biggest highlights from AWS Summit 2024.
AWS App Studio
One of the Summit’s breakout announcements was App Studio<!–>, which is currently in public preview. The new gen-AI-powered platform allows technical professionals to build comprehensive apps using natural language descriptions and prompts. Users can specify the app’s function and the data sources it should pull from, and App Studio will produce an app “that could have taken a professional developer days to build from scratch” in minutes, the release states.
In a demo at AWS Summit, Amazon showed ZDNET how App Studio can take a request for an invoice tracking app, for example, and lay out suggestions for how it should work. Once the user approves the overview and App Studio creates the app, the user can edit it with easy-to-use drag-and-drop functions before deploying it.
App Studio also integrates with third-party services and AWS through connectors. Adam Seligman, vice president of developer experience at AWS, told ZDNET at the summit that the company anticipates App Studio will evolve to feature more integrations based on customer feedback.
Amazon Q updates
contextual grounding checks within Guardrails for Bedrock<!–>, the company’s existing set of generative AI parameters for reducing harmful output. Contextual grounding checks will detect and block hallucinations in model responses for customers using RAG and summarization. The feature also ensures a model’s response can be attributed to the correct enterprise source data and is relevant to the user’s original query.
Bedrock already provides filters for words, topics, harmful content, and personal data – this update builds on blocking information by addressing hallucinations themselves. AWS reports that Guardrails filters up to 75% of hallucinations. AWS also announced a progress update–> on its responsible AI initiatives, which include visual watermarking efforts, policy guidelines, and usage training resources.
Guardrails exist in Bedrock, but to extend its responsible AI reach, AWS also announced an API version of the feature, which will let customers implement the feature across foundation models that aren’t hosted by Bedrock.
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Other AI announcements
As part of AI Ready, Amazon’s free cloud computing skills training initiative, the company also announced AWS SimuLearn–>, an interactive learning platform that “pairs generative AI-powered simulations and hands-on training, to help people learn how to translate business problems into technical solutions,” said Sivasubramanian in the announcement<!–>. Amazon noted that it has beat its 2025 goal of training 29 million people around the world, having reached 31 million as of July 2024.