Tim Bray: “I think the number may actually be higher than that. And in fact, they did."ĪWS right now has about 30% of the cloud computing market. And well, maybe they could try selling it. And, you know, they noticed after a while that they were getting pretty good at building this. Computers running code, storing data, transmitting data, transforming data, doing machine learning, all that stuff had to be built. So in connection with keeping on the air, they had obviously had to become very, very expert at building out lots of computing infrastructure to support the website. Tim Bray: "Amazon has always been a very opportunistic company and looked for opportunities across many sectors of the business space. Interview Highlights: Tim Bray And Michael Cusumano Chair of the House subcommittee on Antitrust, Commercial and Administrative Law. ( David Cicilline, he represents Rhode Island’s 1st congressional district. Werner Vogels, chief technology officer at. Author of “The Business of Platforms." Also Featured ( Cusumano, SMR distinguished professor of management and deputy dean at the MIT Sloan School of Management. Tim Bray, senior principal technologist, then VP and distinguished engineer at Amazon Web Services from December 2014 to May 2020. He quit Amazon due to moral concerns about the treatment of warehouse workers. The fourth installment in our series The Prime Effect goes inside AWS, one of the biggest parts of Amazon you may have never heard of. If you use Slack at work, Zoom for school or binge watch Netflix at home, guess what? You’re also using Amazon. Amazon Web Services currently controls 30% of the cloud computing market. Sign up for the On Point newsletter here. (Igor Golovniov/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images) Facebook Email An Amazon Web Services logo seen displayed on a smartphone screen.
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