Amazon Bedrock announces OpenAI-compatible Projects API

Amazon Bedrock now supports OpenAI-compatible Projects API in the Mantle inference engine in Amazon Bedrock. Amazon Bedrock is a fully managed service that offers a broad selection of best-in-class foundation models from leading AI companies like Anthropic, Meta, and OpenAI, along with a broad set of specialized developer tools that make it easy to build and scale compelling generative AI applications. Mantle is Amazon Bedrock’s distributed inference engine for large-scale model serving that supports OpenAI-compatible APIs. With Projects API, customers who have more than one application, environment, or team can now create individual projects to achieve better isolation across all of them. You can assign different IAM-based access control to each project and add tags to each project for better cost visibility. Projects are available for all customers using the OpenAI-compatible APIs, the Responses API and Chat Completions API, through the Mantle inference engine in Amazon Bedrock. There is no additional charge for using the Projects API. You pay only for the underlying model inference you consume. To get started with the Projects API in Amazon Bedrock, visit the Amazon Bedrock documentation. 
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

Amazon OpenSearch Service adds new insights for improved cluster stability

Amazon OpenSearch Service has enhanced Cluster Insights with two new insights — Cluster Overload and Suboptimal Sharding Strategy. Suboptimal Sharding Strategy provides instant visibility into shard imbalances that cause uneven workload distribution, while Cluster Overload surfaces elevated cluster resource utilization that can lead to request throttling or rejections. Both insights come with details of affected resources along with actionable mitigation recommendations. Previously, identifying resource constraints and shard imbalances required manually correlating multiple metrics and logs, making it difficult to detect issues early. With these new insights, you can proactively monitor cluster health and take timely action. Suboptimal Sharding Strategy detects shard imbalances caused by indices with too few shards relative to the number of data nodes, or by shards carrying disproportionately large amounts of data compared to others. It identifies the root cause of uneven workload distribution and provides recommendations to help you achieve optimal shard distribution for improved query performance and resource utilization. Similarly, Cluster Overload helps you identify elevated resource utilization, including CPU, memory, disk I/O, disk throughput, and disk utilization that can potentially lead to request throttling or rejections. It also provides scale-up recommendations so you can take timely action to protect your critical workloads. These new insights are available at no additional cost for OpenSearch version 2.17 or later in all Regions where the OpenSearch UI is available. See the complete list of supported Regions here. To learn more, visit the Cluster Insights documentation or view the complete catalog of available insights.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

AWS now supports Bacs Direct Debit as a payment method for UK customers

Starting today, AWS customers based in the United Kingdom can use Bacs Direct Debit to pay for their AWS services. This new feature provides a convenient and automated way to manage your cloud spend directly from your GBP-based bank account.
Customers can securely connect any personal or business bank account that supports the Bacs standard. Previously, AWS only  accepted credit or debit cards and EUR-based bank accounts in the UK.
During sign-up, customers can choose “Bacs Direct Debit” from the AWS sign-up page, select their bank, and authenticate using their bank’s mobile app or online banking credentials. This securely verifies ownership and links the bank account to the AWS account. By default, this account will be used for future AWS invoices.
Existing customers can add Bacs Direct Debit by navigating to the Payment Preferences page in the AWS Billing console. They choose “Add payment method,” select “Bacs Direct Debit,” and follow the same bank selection and authentication flow. Once verified, the bank account is available as a payment method for future invoices.
Bacs Direct Debit is available to customers in UK regions at not additional cost. To learn more, see Managing your Bacs direct debit payment method. 
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

Amazon CloudWatch logs centralization rules now support customizable destination log group structure

Amazon CloudWatch now supports customizing destination log group names when creating CloudWatch log centralization rules. Organizations managing logs across multiple accounts can now use attributes to organize centralized logs into meaningful hierarchies — by account ID, region, organizational unit, or other AWS Organizations metadata — that match how their organization operates and what their compliance requirements demand.
You can define a destination log group name structure using attributes that CloudWatch Logs automatically replaces with actual values when logs are copied. For example, using the pattern ${source.accountId}/${source.region}/${source.logGroup} creates destination log groups like 123456789012/us-east-1/cloudtrail/managementevent, making it easy to identify which account and region logs originated from. You can use attributes, including source account ID, region, log group name, organization ID, organizational unit ID, root ID, and the full organizational path.
Customizable destination log group names are available in all centralization rules supported regions.
Customers can use centralization rules to centralize one copy of logs for free (ingestion). Additional copies are charged at $0.05/GB of logs centralized (the backup region feature is considered an additional copy). Storage charges apply. To learn more, visit the CloudWatch Logs Centralization documentation.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com