13-08-2024
Amazon Web Services (AWS) is announcing an integrated mobile experience for AWS services in the AWS Console Mobile App. AWS customers using the AWS Console Mobile App can now access 16 additional AWS services including AWS Systems Manager, AWS Developer Tools, and Amazon Elastic Kubernetes Service, in accordance with their permissions via an integrated mobile web browser experience in the AWS Console Mobile App. Now, AWS customers who are on-the-go can use the AWS Console Mobile App exclusively to access a select set of both native and non-natively supported services. Customers benefit from the AWS Console Mobile App's biometric authentication (sign-in), and mobile optimized customer experience. For AWS services not available natively, customers can access the AWS Management Console via an in-app browser where they are deep linked to the relevant service pages without additional authentication, manual navigation, or need to switch from the app to a browser. The Console Mobile App lets users view and manage a select set of resources to stay informed and connected with their AWS resources while on-the-go. The sign in process supports device password managers and biometrics authentication, making access to AWS resources simple, secure, and quick. Visit the product page for more information about the Console Mobile App.
AWS announces the general availability of support for Cost Allocation tags for the AWS Transit Gateway. With this capability, administrators can tag their AWS Transit Gateway resource and use AWS cost allocation tags to categorize and allocate costs by team, department or application. Until now, customers were able to only categorize their Attachment Hours costs by tagging attachments. Customers will now, also be able to categorize their data processing and data transfer charges by tagging AWS Transit Gateway as a resource. Support for Cost Allocation tags is available in all regions. You can enable this feature by tagging your AWS Transit Gateway resource using the AWS Management Console, Amazon Command Line Interface, and the Amazon Software Development Kit. There is no additional charge for using Cost Allocation Tags with AWS Transit Gateway. For more information, see Tag operations, and AWS Transit Gateway product, pricing and documentation pages.
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AWS Batch now supports cancellation of jobs while they are waiting in the queue. This allows you to cancel jobs before they are executed. Also, if you are using the fair-share scheduling feature, you can cancel jobs with an outdated priority to make room for jobs submitted by other users to the same queue to progress. Jobs canceled while waiting in queue will be moved to the FAILED state.
Amazon CloudWatch Internet Monitor has launched an updated console experience, including new features for visualizing configuration changes that can help you reduce latency for your application. With the refreshed dashboard, the Internet Monitor console now lets you easily find and take advantage of Internet Monitor’s breadth of capabilities. The Overview page summarizes statistics for all monitored traffic, while the Health events page shows details of internet health events across the globe that impact your end user traffic. You can use the Analyze page to view top client locations (by traffic volume) as well as historical trends for your application’s internet health scores. On the Configure page, you can view a summary of resources monitored and other details, and update your monitor settings. Finally, the Optimize page provides suggestions for how you can reduce latency.