Split Cost Allocation Data for Amazon EKS supports Kubernetes labels

Starting today, Split Cost Allocation Data for Amazon EKS now allows you to import up to 50 Kubernetes custom labels per pod as cost allocation tags. You can attribute costs of your Amazon EKS cluster at the pod level using custom attributes, such as cost center, application, business unit, and environment in AWS Cost and Usage Report (CUR). With this new capability, you can better align your cost allocation with specific business requirements and organizational structure driven by your cloud financial management needs. This enables granular cost visibility of your EKS clusters running multiple application containers using shared EC2 instances, allowing you to allocate the shared costs of your EKS cluster. For new split cost allocation data customers, you can enable this feature in the AWS Billing and Cost Management console. For existing customers, EKS will automatically import the labels, but you must activate them as cost allocation tags. After activation, Kubernetes custom labels are available in your CUR within 24 hours. You can use the Containers Cost Allocation dashboard to visualize the costs in Amazon QuickSight and the CUR query library to query the costs using Amazon Athena. This feature is available in all AWS Regions where Split Cost Allocation Data for Amazon EKS is available. To get started, visit Understanding Split Cost Allocation Data.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

TwelveLabs’ Pegasus 1.2 model now available in three additional AWS regions

Amazon announces the expansion of the TwelveLabs’ Pegasus 1.2 video understanding model to the US East (Ohio), US West (N. California), and Europe (Frankfurt) AWS Regions. This expansion makes it easier for customers to build and scale generative AI applications that can understand and interact with video content at an enterprise level. Pegasus 1.2 is a powerful video-first language model that can generate text based on the visual, audio, and textual content within videos. Specifically designed for long-form video, it excels at video-to-text generation and temporal understanding. With Pegasus 1.2’s availability in these additional regions, you can now build video-intelligence applications closer to your data and end users in key geographic locations, reducing latency and simplifying your architecture. With today’s expansion, Pegasus 1.2 is now available in Amazon Bedrock across 7 regions: US East (N. Virginia), US West (Oregon), US East (Ohio), US West (N. California), Europe (Ireland), Europe (Frankfurt), and Asia Pacific (Seoul). To get started with Pegasus 1.2, visit the Amazon Bedrock console. To learn more, read the blog, product page, Amazon Bedrock pricing, and documentation. 
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

Amazon WorkSpaces announces USB redirection support for DCV WorkSpaces

AWS announces USB redirection support for WorkSpaces running Amazon DCV protocol, enabling users to access locally connected USB devices from their virtual desktop environments. With this feature, customers can now connect a wide range of USB peripherals to their virtual desktops, including credit card readers, 3D mice, and other specialized devices. USB redirection addresses the need for direct access to USB devices that require specialized drivers or lack dedicated protocols. This capability is currently limited to WorkSpaces Personal with Windows desktops accessed from Windows client devices. Performance and device compatibility may vary, so testing with your specific USB peripherals is recommended before adding them to the allowlist. This feature is available in all AWS Regions where Amazon WorkSpaces is offered. For more information about USB redirection in Amazon WorkSpaces, see USB Redirection for DCV in the Amazon WorkSpaces Administration Guide, or visit the Amazon WorkSpaces page to learn more about virtual desktop solutions from AWS.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com