AWS Weekly Roundup: AWS Pi Day, Amazon Bedrock multi-agent collaboration, Amazon SageMaker Unified Studio, Amazon S3 Tables, and more

Thanks to everyone who joined us for the fifth annual AWS Pi Day on March 14. Since its inception in 2021, commemorating the Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) 15th anniversary, AWS Pi Day has grown into a flagship event highlighting the transformative power of cloud technologies in data management, analytics, and AI.

This year’s virtual event featured in-depth discussions with Amazon Web Services (AWS) product teams showcasing our continued innovation in helping customers build robust data foundations for analytics and AI workloads.

Missed the live event? You can still access all content on-demand at the event page. Whether you’re developing data lakehouses, training AI models, creating generative AI applications, or optimizing analytics workloads, the shared insights will help you maximize the value of your data.

Last week’s launches
Here are some launches that got my attention during the previous week.

Amazon Bedrock now supports multi-agent collaboration – With the availability of multi-agent collaboration in Amazon Bedrock, you can create networks of specialized agents that communicate and coordinate under the guidance of a supervisor agent. You can build, deploy, and manage networks of AI agents that work together to execute complex, multi-step workflows efficiently.

Availability of fully managed DeepSeek-R1 model in Amazon Bedrock – AWS is the first cloud service provider (CSP) to deliver DeepSeek-R1 as a fully managed, generally available model. Use the capabilities of DeepSeek-R1 for your generative AI applications with a single API through this fully managed service in Amazon Bedrock.

Amazon SageMaker Unified Studio is now generally available – You can now use Amazon SageMaker Unified Studio as your single data and AI development environment, where you can find and access all of your organization’s data and work using the best tools for your specific needs. With the new simplified permissions management, you can easily bring your existing AWS resources into the unified studio. You’ll be able to find, access, and query your organization’s data and AI assets while collaborating with your team to securely build and share your analytics and AI artifacts—from data and models to generative AI applications.

Amazon Bedrock’s capabilities now generally available within Amazon SageMaker Unified Studio – SageMaker Unified Studio brings selected capabilities from Amazon Bedrock into SageMaker. You can now rapidly prototype, customize, and share generative AI applications using foundation models (FMs) and advanced features such as Amazon Bedrock Knowledge BasesAmazon Bedrock GuardrailsAmazon Bedrock Agents, and Amazon Bedrock Flows to create tailored solutions aligned with your requirements and responsible AI guidelines all within SageMaker.

Amazon S3 Tables integration with Amazon SageMaker Lakehouse is now generally availableAmazon S3 Tables now seamlessly integrate with Amazon SageMaker Lakehouse, making it easy for you to query and join S3 Tables with data in S3 data lakes, Amazon Redshift data warehouses, and third-party data sources. S3 Tables deliver the first cloud object store with built-in Apache Iceberg support.

Amazon S3 Tables now support create and query table operations directly from the S3 console using Amazon Athena – Amazon S3 Tables adds create and query table support in the S3 console. With this new feature, you can now create a table, populate it with data, and query it directly from the S3 console using Amazon Athena, making it easier to get started and analyze data in S3 table buckets.

Amazon S3 reduces pricing for S3 object tagging by 35% – Amazon S3 reduces pricing for S3 object tagging by 35% in all AWS Regions to $0.0065 per 10,000 tags per month. Object tags are key-value pairs applied to S3 objects that can be created, updated, or deleted at any time during the lifetime of the object.

Serverless Land Patterns available in Visual Studio CodeServerless Land‘s extensive application pattern library is now available directly into the Visual Studio Code (VS Code) IDE, making it easier for developers to build serverless applications. This integration eliminates the need to switch between your development environment and external resources when building serverless architectures by enabling you to browse, search, and implement pre-built serverless patterns directly in VS Code IDE.

Amplify Hosting Announces Skew Protection SupportAWS Amplify Hosting now offers Skew Protection, a feature that guarantees version consistency across your deployments. This feature ensures frontend requests are always routed to the correct server backend version—eliminating version skew and making deployments more reliable.

From community.aws
Here are some of my favorite posts from community.aws. Create your AWS Builder ID to start sharing your tips and connect with fellow builders. Your Builder ID is a universal login credential that gives you access, beyond the AWS Management Console, to AWS tools and resources, including over 600 free training courses, community features, and developer tools such as Amazon Q Developer.

Seamless SQL Server Recovery on EC2 with AWS Systems Manager (Greg Vinton) – This guide explains how to use the AWSEC2-RestoreSqlServerDatabaseWithVss automation runbook to restore a Microsoft SQL Server database on an Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) instance.

Secure Deployment Strategies in Amazon EKS with Azure DevOps (Abhishek Nanda) – Build and Deploy containerized applications on Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service (Amazon EKS) using Azure DevOps.

Connect Your Favorite LLM Client to Bedrock (Qinjie Zhang) – It’s common to use desktop applications like MSTY, Chatbox AI, LM Studio to simplify the use of Large Language Models (LLM) models. This blog provides a step-by-step guide on how you can connect your favorite local LLM clients to Amazon Bedrock.

From PHP to Python with the help of Amazon Q Developer (Ricardo Sueiras) – In this blog post, Ricardo showcases how to use Amazon Q Developer CLI to refactor code from one programming language to another.

Upcoming AWS events
Check your calendars and sign up for these upcoming AWS events:

AWS Community Days – Join community-led conferences that feature technical discussions, workshops, and hands-on labs led by expert AWS users and industry leaders from around the world: Milan, Italy (April 2), Bay Area – Security Edition (April 4), Timișoara, Romania (April 10), and Prague, Czech Republic (April 29).

AWS Innovate: Generative AI + Data – Join a free online conference focusing on generative AI and data innovations in Latin America on April 8.

AWS Summits – The AWS Summit season is coming along! Join free online and in-person events that bring the cloud computing community together to connect, collaborate, and learn about AWS. Register in your nearest city: Paris (April 9), Amsterdam (April 16), London (April 30), and Poland (May 5).

AWS re:Inforce (June 16–18) – Our annual learning event devoted to all things AWS Cloud security in Philadelphia, PA. Registration opens in March, so be ready to join more than 5,000 security builders and leaders.

AWS DevDays are free, technical events where developers can learn about some of the hottest topics in cloud computing. DevDays offer hands-on workshops, technical sessions, live demos, and networking with AWS technical experts and your peers. Register to access AWS DevDays sessions on demand.

That’s all for this week. Check back next Monday for another Weekly Roundup!

Prasad

This post is part of our Weekly Roundup series. Check back each week for a quick roundup of interesting news and announcements from AWS!


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