Amazon Web Services, a cloud platform that supports a portion of the internet, experienced a massive outage on Monday.
AWS traced the source of the problem to something called the “DynamoDB endpoint in the US-East-1 Region,” in a pair of jargon ...
A massive AWS outage brought Internet-reliant services, from software to smart devices, down worldwide, and we now know what ...
Amazon Web Services experienced DNS resolution issues on Monday morning, taking down wide swaths of the web—and highlighting ...
Amazon Web Services has revealed that its efforts to recover from the massive mess at its US-EAST-1 region caused other ...
Thousands of websites and apps like Snapchat, Roblox, Ring and more were down or experiencing issues Monday morning as a major cloud computing service went offline. The errors began just after 12 a.m.
Maybe we rely on Amazon Web Services a little too much. Thousands of sites, apps, and services went dark Monday morning. Here's why.
Yesterday, a major AWS outage brought the world to a standstill. But why did it happen? And will it ever happen again?
Today, Amazon Web Services (AWS) is grappling with a significant outage, primarily due to DNS issues, highlighting the impact ...
AWS has shared new details about what caused the major service outage that hit its Northern Virginia region on October 19 and ...
The whole thing led to further complications that kept websites offline for a good chunk of the workday. That outage has a ...
Google's Cloud Spanner is now half the cost of Amazon's DynamoDB "for most workloads," Google says. And Google doesn't want you to forget it. Google today announced that Cloud Spanner, its distributed ...