Amazon offers new data tool to help carmakers prevent recalls, improve safety
Amazon Web Services has launched a new cloud-based data service that could help automakers remotely diagnose issues in their vehicles to prevent recalls and improve safety, as well as manage related data, the company told Reuters.
Called AWS IoT FleetWise, the latest tool in the company’s newly branded AWS for Automotive portfolio of products and services for the transportation industry is being rolled out on Tuesday at Amazon.com Inc’s annual re:Invent conference in Las Vegas.
FleetWise enables customers, including auto suppliers and transportation providers, to collect, organise and transfer vehicle data to the cloud, while standardising different data formats to simplify data analysis, according to Mike Tzamaloukas, general manager of AWS for Automotive.
“As vehicles become more intelligent and advanced, the sheer amount of data produced from vehicles equipped with cameras, lidars and radars is growing exponentially,” Tzamaloukas said.
FleetWise was developed to allow customers “to easily access fragmented data across the different fleet models and vehicle types”, he said.
FleetWise was also designed to complement data-driven services offered by automakers, including General Motors Co’s OnStar and Ford Motor Co’s Ford Pro Intelligence, he said.
The new service joins a broad range of in-vehicle and cloud-to-vehicle offerings from AWS for Automotive and 185 business partners, according to Dean Phillips, worldwide tech leader for the business unit.
With a greater focus on the industry’s growing shift to software-defined vehicles and systems, “we’re trying to make it simpler and easier for our customers to discover solutions to their problems”, he said, citing development of self-driving cars and “digital customer engagement”, including streamed services.
The AWS portfolio includes cloud-based computing, data storage, analytics and application development.
While Amazon does not break out the value of its automotive cloud services business, the company’s AWS unit continues to grow.
In 2020, AWS reported an operating profit of $13.5bn (roughly R213,405,300,000) on sales of $45.4bn (roughly R717,718,612,000), up 47% and 30% respectively from the previous year. Through the first nine months of 2021, despite the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic and global supply-chain disruptions, AWS’s growth was even more robust: $13.2bn (roughly R208,675,896,000) in operating profit on $44.4bn (roughly R701,909,832,000) in sales, nearly matching its full-year results in 2020.
According to Synergy Research Group, more than 60% of the $45bn (roughly R711,362,250,000) in enterprise cloud services spending in the third quarter was funnelled to three large tech companies: Alphabet Inc’s Google, with 10%, Microsoft Corp with 20%, and AWS with 33%.
On Tuesday, AWS, one of the biggest buyers of data centre processors, also introduced new custom computing chips aimed at helping its customers beat the cost of using chips from Intel Corp and Nvidia Corp.
Would you like to comment on this article or view other readers' comments? Register (it’s quick and free) or sign in now.
Please read our Comment Policy before commenting.