Amazon SageMaker Data Agent now supports geo-specific inference for Japan and Australia

Amazon SageMaker Data Agent now supports cross-region inference profiles for Japan and Australia through Amazon Bedrock. With this update, inference requests from Data Agent in the Asia Pacific (Tokyo) and Asia Pacific (Sydney) regions are processed within their respective geographies, supporting data sovereignty requirements for customers in Japan and Australia.
Data Agent provides an AI-powered conversational experience for data exploration, Python and SQL code generation, troubleshooting, and analytics directly within Amazon SageMaker Unified Studio Notebook and Query Editor. With geo-specific inference through JP-CRIS (Japan Cross-Region Inference) and AU-CRIS (Australia Cross-Region Inference), you can use Data Agent with confidence that your inference requests are routed exclusively within your geography over the AWS Global Network. Customers in regulated industries such as financial services, healthcare, and the public sector can meet data residency requirements while using the full set of Data Agent capabilities.
To get started, open a project in SageMaker Unified Studio in a supported region and use Data Agent in notebooks or Query Editor. For more information, see SageMaker Data Agent in the Amazon SageMaker Unified Studio User Guide.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

Amazon ECS announces Managed Daemons for ECS Managed Instances

Amazon ECS announces Managed Daemons for ECS Managed Instances, enabling organizations to centrally deploy and manage software agents such as security, observability, and networking across their container infrastructure independent of application deployments. By decoupling daemon lifecycle management from application operations, Managed Daemons helps guarantee reliable agent coverage across all workloads, simplifies deployments and version updates, and improves resource utilization by running a single daemon task per managed instance. With Managed Daemons, you can create a daemon for one or more Managed Instances capacity providers in your cluster. ECS places exactly one daemon task per managed instance and guarantees that daemons are running before any application tasks are placed, so cross-cutting functions such as logging, tracing, and metrics collection are always available. ECS orchestrates daemons as independent processes bound to the instance lifecycle rather than individual application tasks, allowing platform administrators to manage them independently from application teams. When you update daemon versions, ECS drains existing instances and provisions new instances with the updated daemon, automatically replacing service tasks with circuit breaker protection and rollback capabilities for reliable coverage across all your workloads. To get started, you can use AWS Console, CLI, CloudFormation, or AWS SDKs to register a daemon task definition specifying your container image, then create a daemon with associated capacity providers in your clusters. This feature is now available in all AWS Regions. For more details, refer to our documentation and launch blog post. There is no additional cost – you pay only for the standard compute resources consumed by your daemon tasks. 
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

Amazon SES Mail Manager adds new features for enhanced security and email processing

Amazon Simple Email Service (SES) Mail Manager now offers enhancements to email security and processing while simplifying email infrastructure migrations. These enhancements include optional TLS and certificate-based authentication (mTLS) support in Ingress Endpoint, and two new rule actions: Invoke Lambda function and Bounce. These enhancements benefit organizations seeking to maintain compatibility with legacy systems while implementing stronger security controls, and advanced email routing capabilities. For example customers can now configure STARTTLS as an optional TLS configuration, enabling legacy systems that don’t support STARTTLS to connect to Mail Manager. With Mutual TLS (mTLS) in Ingress Endpoint customers can now used certificate-based authentication for enhanced security. The Invoke Lambda function rule action allows direct invocation of AWS Lambda functions from rule sets, enabling custom email processing workflows and the Bounce rule action provides RFC-compliant SMTP responses to sending servers.
These new enhancements are available today in all AWS Regions where Amazon SES Mail Manager is offered, except for the Middle East (UAE) and Middle East (Bahrain) regions. To learn more about Amazon SES Mail Manager and how these features can help streamline your email operations, visit https://aws.amazon.com/ses/.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

OpenStack Gazpacho: Built by a Global Community, Designed for Real-World Infrastructure

Today, the OpenStack community is proud to announce the release of OpenStack 2026.1 Gazpacho, the 33rd release of the world’s most widely deployed open source cloud infrastructure software. But beyond the features and improvements, Gazpacho tells a deeper story: one of a global community continuing to come together to solve real infrastructure challenges through open… Read more »
Quelle: openstack.org

Oracle Database@AWS launches sub-millisecond network latency for high performance applications

Today, Oracle Database@AWS (ODB@AWS) announced high performance networking that provides customers consistent sub-millisecond roundtrip latency from their AWS applications to the database. Many applications such as payment processing, securities trading, and high volume transaction processing require predictable and consistent low-latency network connectivity to the application database. Customers who run such latency-sensitive applications on Oracle Exadata systems on-premises optimize their infrastructure to obtain the performance that these applications require. With high performance networking for ODB@AWS, customers can now seamlessly migrate these applications to an equivalent optimized environment on AWS. ODB@AWS automatically provides consistent and predictable low-latency network connectivity from Amazon EC2 instances to ODB@AWS databases through optimized placement of compute instances. When customers create an ODB@AWS network for their databases, they can now launch placement optimized Amazon EC2 instances with consistent, sub-millisecond latency network connectivity to their databases using existing Amazon EC2 APIs and workflows, such as launching new EC2 instances, or reserving compute capacity with EC2 On-Demand Capacity Reservations. There is no additional charge for EC2 instances using optimized placement for connectivity to ODB@AWS databases. The feature is available in the US-East-2 (Ohio), CA-Central-1 (Canada Central), EU-Central-1 (Frankfurt), EU-West-1 (Dublin), AP-Northeast-1 (Tokyo), and AP-Southeast-2 (Sydney) AWS Regions, with more Regions coming soon. For more information, see High performance networking for Oracle Database@AWS.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com