Last week I met Jeff Barr at the AWS Shenzhen Community Day. Jeff shared stories about how builders around the world are experimenting with generative AI and encouraged local developers to keep pushing ideas into real prototypes. Many attendees stayed after the sessions to discuss model grounding, evaluation, and how to bring generative AI into real applications.
Community builders showcased creative Kiro-themed demos, AI-powered IoT projects, and student-led experiments. It was inspiring to see new developers, students, and long-time Amazon Web Services (AWS) community leaders connecting over shared curiosity and excitement for generative AI innovation.
Project Rainier, one of the world’s most powerful operational AI supercomputers is now online. Built by AWS in close collaboration with Anthropic, Project Rainier brings nearly 500,000 AWS custom-designed Trainium2 chips into service using a new Amazon Elastic Compute (Amazon EC2) UltraServer and EC2 UltraCluster architecture designed for high-bandwidth, low-latency model training at hyperscale.
Anthropic is already training and running inference for Claude on Project Rainier, and is expected to scale to more than one million Trainium2 chips across direct usage and Amazon Bedrock by the end of 2025. For architecture details, deployment insights, and behind-the-scenes video of an UltraServer coming online, refer to AWS activates Project Rainier for the full announcement.
Last week’s launches
 Here are the launches that got my attention this week:
- Amazon Nova – Adds Web Grounding as a new built-in tool for real-time, citation-based web retrieval, and introduces Multimodal Embeddings, a state-of-the-art model that produces unified cross-modal vectors, improving accuracy for Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) and semantic search. Both capabilities are available in Amazon Bedrock.
 - Amazon Bedrock – TwelveLabs’ Marengo Embed 3.0 is now available for long-form, video-native multimodal embeddings across video, images, audio, and text with improved domain accuracy. Stability AI Image Services added four new tools: Outpaint, Fast Upscale, Conservative Upscale, and Creative Upscale for high-resolution upscaling, outpainting, and controlled variations.
 - Model Context Protocol (MCP) Proxy for AWS – Now generally available as a client-side proxy that connects MCP clients to remote AWS hosted MCP servers using SigV4 authentication. It works with tools like Amazon Q Developer CLI, Kiro, Cursor, and Strands Agents, and provides safety controls such as read-only mode, retry logic, and logging. The Proxy is open-source. You can visit the AWS GitHub repository to view the installation and configuration options and start connecting with remote AWS MCP servers.
 - Amazon Elastic Container Service (Amazon ECS) – Now supports built-in linear and canary deployment strategies, providing gradual traffic shifting, canary testing with small production slices, deployment bake times for safe rollback, and Amazon CloudWatch alarm-based automated rollbacks.
 - Amazon DocumentDB – Adds a new query planner in Amazon DocumentDB 5.0 that delivers up to 10 times faster query performance with more optimal index plans and support for 
$neq,$nin, and nested$elementMatch, and can be enabled through cluster parameter groups without downtime. - Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS) – You can now use new per-volume CloudWatch metrics, VolumeAvgIOPS and VolumeAvgThroughput, to get minute-level visibility into average IOPS and throughput for EBS volumes on AWS Nitro based instances. These metrics help monitor performance trends, troubleshoot bottlenecks, and optimize provisioned capacity.
 - Amazon Kinesis Data Streams – You can now send individual records up to 10 MiB, a tenfold increase from the previous limit, helping support larger Internet of Things (IoT), change data capture (CDC), and AI-generated payloads.
Amazon SageMaker – Unified Studio search results now provide additional search context, showing matched metadata fields and ranking rationale to improve transparency and relevance in data discovery. 
Additional updates
 Here are some additional projects, blog posts, and news items that I found interesting:
- Building production-ready 3D pipelines with AWS VAMS and 4D Pipeline – A reference architecture for creating scalable, cloud-based 3D asset pipelines using AWS Visual Asset Management System (VAMS) and 4D Pipeline, supporting ingest, validation, collaborative review, and distribution across games, visual effects (VFX), and digital twins.
 - Amazon Location Service introduces new API key restrictions – You can now create granular security policies with bundle IDs to restrict API access to specific mobile applications, improving access control and strengthening application-level security across location-based workloads.
 - AWS Clean Rooms launches advanced SQL configurations – A performance enhancement for Spark SQL workloads that supports runtime customization of Spark properties and compute sizes, plus table caching for faster and more cost-efficient processing of large analytical queries.
 - AWS Serverless MCP Server adds event source mappings (ESM) tools – A capability for event-driven serverless applications that supports configuration, performance tuning, and troubleshooting of AWS Lambda event source mappings, including AWS Serverless Application Model (AWS SAM) template generation and diagnostic insights.
 - AWS IoT Greengrass releases an AI agent context pack – A development accelerator for cloud-connected edge applications that provides ready-to-use instructions, examples, and templates, helping teams integrate generative AI tools such as Amazon Q for faster software creation, testing, and fleet-wide deployment. It’s available as open source on the GitHub repository.
 - AWS Step Functions introduces a new metrics dashboard – You can now view usage, billing, and performance metrics at the state-machine level for standard and express workflows in a single console view, improving visibility and troubleshooting for distributed applications.
 
Upcoming AWS events
 Check your calendars so that you can sign up for these upcoming events:
- AWS Builder Loft – A community tech space in San Francisco where you can learn from expert sessions, join hands-on workshops, explore AI and emerging technologies, and collaborate with other builders to accelerate their ideas. Browse the upcoming sessions and join the events that interest you.
 - AWS Community Days – Join community-led conferences that feature technical discussions, workshops, and hands-on labs led by experienced AWS users and industry leaders from around the world: Hong Kong (November 2), Abuja (November 8), Cameroon (November 8), and Spain (November 15).
 - AWS Skills Center Seattle 4th Anniversary Celebration – A free, public event on November 20 with a keynote, learned panels, recruiter insights, raffles, and virtual participation options.
 
Join the AWS Builder Center to learn, build, and connect with builders in the AWS community. Browse here for upcoming in-person events, developer-focused events, and events for startups.
That’s all for this week. Check back next Monday for another Weekly Roundup!
– Betty
from AWS News Blog https://ift.tt/3VBqSnH
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