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Transforming Development with AWS

All Things Distributed

I was joined by 32,000 James Bonds at the conference today from all around the world, and we introduced new services focused on accelerating this transformation across development, testing and operations, data and analytics, and computation itself. We also added C# support for AWS Lambda. Step through functions at scale.

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Revisiting “Serverless Architectures”

The Symphonia

I was a little restricted in my thinking the first time around and I’ve come to see FaaS as something not quite stateless, since caching state in a Lambda instance that might stick around for 5 hours is a perfectly reasonable idea. Also there’s been a lot of open source updates, including from Amazon and Microsoft.

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Did you get your re:Invent holiday wish?

The Symphonia

Lambda is 4 years old, and clearly one of AWS’ main paths forward, along with machine learning. Lambda, alone, had a treasure trove of updates: Python 3.7, Ruby, C++, and Rust are now Lambda languages directly supported by AWS. Along with Custom Runtimes comes Lambda Layers?—?artifacts And this is fine!

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Examining the AWS Serverless Application Repository

The Symphonia

The general goal of SAR is to make it easier to distribute, and consume, applications that have been developed using AWS Serverless products, like Lambda. Finally, SAR isn’t just the “Lambda Blueprints” catalogue rebranded?—?it’s the Serverless Application Repository (SAR)?—?at at re:Invent 2017. it’s much more than that.