“We have investigated the reported exploit, and can confirm that the exploit has been closed as of Monday afternoon,” an Amazon spokesman said via email this morning in response to our inquiry about the situation.
“What should we debate next?” KUOW asked on Wednesday in Seattle. (GeekWire Photo / Kurt Schlosser)
“You just need a landing field,” said?Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos at an event in Seattle this weekend. “And if you have a landing field, you can mark it with a symbol which you can print out on your printer and put wherever you want the vehicle to land.”
“Welcome to Amazon” is a phrase commonly heard on the tech titan’s Seattle campus but typically reserved for new employees and office tours. That could all change if Stonecrest, Ga., gets its way.
“You’re going to get a lot more database freedom, everybody, than you’ve had the last 20 years,” Jassy ?said. “People have been locked in to these old-guard, commercial-grade databases and they’ve been trying to move as fast as they can to open-source editions like MySQL, PostgreSQL, and MariaDB?… To get the same performance in those open editions as you can get?in the commercial grade databases, it’s doable, it’s hard though.”
“You can become the best and the most knowledgeable in that niche category, and you can run with it,” said Boyce, author of The Amazon Jungle: The Seller’s Survival Guide for Thriving on the World’s Most Perilous E-Commerce Marketplace. “And when you step on a landmine, not if. If you know how to put the pieces back together, after that happens, you can survive on Amazon. It is a very, very narrow path that’s getting narrower by the day.”
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“They feed off each other, and while you compete — while you compete for talent, while you compete in the market — I think there is also a goodness that comes because some of that flow of talent and influx of talent, like Sujal (Patel) moved here because he wanted to be part of something, I think makes the whole industry stronger and it will be great for Seattle. Believe it or not, I look at that as a positive, not a negative.”
“We’re really happy; it’s very early — I’d caution everyone to remember most enterprise workflows have yet to move to cloud so there’s still much adoption to come,” Olsavsky said.
“Without the ability to test outdoors in the United States soon, we will have no choice but to divert even more of our UAS (unmanned aerial systems) research and development resources abroad,” warns the letter from Paul Misener, Amazon vice president of global public policy.
“When China and African countries are working together, we have much better chance to succeed, we have a much better chance to respond effectively to all these global changes,” he said.