Cloud pioneer now offers its suite of infrastructure web services for
the new Tokyo Region and localized Premium Support in Japanese
Mitsui & Co., gumi Inc., Zynga and COOKPAD among the companies
already using Amazon Web Services from new AWS Tokyo Region
SEATTLE, Mar 02, 2011 (BUSINESS WIRE) --
(NASDAQ: AMZN) -- Amazon Web Services LLC (AWS), an Amazon.com company,
today announced the launch of its new Asia Pacific (Tokyo) Region, the
fifth Region in which the company has deployed its global cloud
computing platform. Japan-based businesses and global companies with
customers in Japan can now leverage the AWS suite of infrastructure web
services to build their businesses and run their applications in the
cloud. Starting today, AWS is also offering support in Japanese for any
customer with a Japanese language preference. The newly launched Tokyo
Region is the second Region in Asia Pacific for AWS, and is now
available for any business or software developer to sign up and get
started today at http://aws.amazon.com
and http://aws.amazon.com/jp.
Before AWS launched in early 2006, businesses would take on the massive
capital investment of building their own infrastructure or contract with
a vendor for a fixed amount of datacenter capacity that they might or
might not use. This choice meant either paying for wasted capacity or
having to worry that the amount of capacity they forecasted was
insufficient to keep pace with their growth. Many businesses spent time
and money managing their own datacenter or a co-location facility, which
meant time not spent on growing their actual business or differentiating
their offering for customers. Over the past five years, AWS has changed
the way that businesses think about technology infrastructure--incur no
up-front expenses or long-term commitments, turn capital expense into
variable operating expense, scale seamlessly by adding or shedding
resources as quickly as you wish, free up scarce engineering resources
from the undifferentiated heavy lifting of running your own
infrastructure--all without sacrificing operational performance,
reliability, or security.
"Today, AWS powers hundreds of thousands of customers in over 190
countries around the world, including individual developers, startups,
government agencies and enterprises," said Andy Jassy, Senior Vice
President, Amazon Web Services. "More and more, companies are realizing
that they can use AWS to save significant capital, innovate faster,
accelerate their pace of technology delivery, and focus their scarce
engineering resources on what differentiates their business rather than
on infrastructure. AWS is already being used by many companies in Japan,
and with single digit millisecond latency in most instances to end users
in Japan from our new Tokyo Region, we expect that to accelerate."
AWS Basic Support is free to all users and offers access to the AWS
Resource Center, Service Health Dashboard, Technical FAQs, and Developer
Forums. AWS Premium Support is a one-on-one, fast-response support
channel that is staffed 24x7x365 with experienced technical support
engineers. Companies can now access AWS Basic Support and subscribe to
AWS Premium Support in Japanese, giving customers choices for their
preferred language so that they can successfully utilize the products
and features provided by Amazon Web Services. For more details on the
multiple offerings within AWS Premium Support, please visit: https://aws.amazon.com/support.
In addition, AWS plans to provide in the coming months the option for
billing in Japanese Yen.
Many Japanese customers have already been using AWS in existing AWS
Regions. Today's launch of the new Tokyo Region enables companies to run
their applications in Japan, which significantly reduces latency to
end-users in Japan and allows those needing their data to reside in
Japan to easily do so.
Mitsui & Co., Ltd, a Japanese conglomerate with diverse business
operations around the world, is among the enterprises in Japan currently
using the new AWS Tokyo Region. "Mitsui views information technology to
be as important as its resources of people, goods and capital," said Mr.
Seiichi Tanaka, CIO of Mitsui. "One of those important IT initiatives we
have at Mitsui is using cloud computing to help us develop new products
and services that will further differentiate and grow our business. For
example, we are using AWS to run the test and development environment of
SAP enterprise systems to improve our business efficiency and services.
We chose AWS as our cloud platform for these activities because we value
the rich experience and global scale that AWS has been delivering to
customers over the years. We expect that the AWS Tokyo Region will meet
our growing desire to use cloud computing with our enterprise systems,"
added Mr. Seiichi Tanaka, CIO of Mitsui.
gumi Inc., one of the largest social gaming companies in Japan, built
their websites almost entirely on Amazon Web Services. The company
handles over 50 million page views and 10 million unique users per day.
Before using AWS, they used to rent servers at datacenter, but soon ran
out of capacity and could not meet the increasing traffic in a timely
manner. "We chose Amazon Web Services due to its ease of use and the
flexibility to scale our capacity requirement to meet our customer
demand by adding or shedding servers quickly, which is easily managed by
a small team of internal people. AWS has freed us from the heavy lifting
of infrastructure and allowed us to speed up the testing and evaluation
of our social applications. We have since reduced our time to market and
our development costs," said Mr. Yasuhiro Horiuchi, CTO of gumi Inc. The
company is currently using Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2),
Amazon Relational Database Service (Amazon RDS) with the
multi-Availability Zone deployment option, and Amazon Simple Storage
Service (Amazon S3). The company is planning to release its next social
game in the new AWS Tokyo Region. "By leveraging AWS' new infrastructure
services running in Japan, we are able to develop and launch our new
game within a short span of time. We are impressed with the network
performance we are seeing, and we look forward to building more of our
services on AWS in the new Tokyo Region," added Mr. Yasuhiro Horiuchi,
CTO of gumi Inc.
Zynga, the world's largest social game developer, has been using Amazon
Web Services for the past few months in Japan. "Amazon Web Services
reduces our development cycle dramatically and gives us the flexibility
to scale the infrastructure resources required to meet high traffic
volume very quickly," said Mr. Mark Stockford, Vice President of
Production Operations for Zynga. "In the social games environment, low
latency and high availability are critical requirements and we are happy
to work with AWS in the Tokyo region to ensure the best user experience
possible when playing Zynga games."
COOKPAD, the most popular recipe site in Japan, has been using AWS for
high performance data analysis. "By using Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud
and Amazon Elastic MapReduce, we have been able to provision capacity on
demand for performing data-intensive tasks such as data mining, log file
analysis and data warehousing. We are now able to focus on analyzing our
data without having to worry about time-consuming set-up, management or
the compute capacity. This has enabled us to concentrate in driving our
business much more quickly, and with the newly launched AWS Tokyo Region
we expect the benefits to be enhanced even further," said Mr. Kenta
Hashimoto, CTO of COOKPAD Inc.
Olympus Memory Works Corporation runs a photo sharing online service
using AWS called "ib on the net" which provides free photo space, print
and photobook services for both Japan and US markets. Olympus worked
with Accenture Japan to implement the services using Amazon Elastic
Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) and Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon
S3). "Amazon Web Services has given us the peace of mind to meet the
holiday peak seasons when there is high volume of customers accessing
our online services. We like the fact that we can scale both up and down
any time, paying for what we actually use and not sitting on unneeded
excess capacity. We have saved capital expenses and reduced our cost to
one fifth of what it was previously, as a result of using AWS," said Mr.
Hisakazu Hayashi, Manager of Business Operations, Olympus Memory Works.
SUUMO, a housing and real estate information services operated by Japan
Recruit Co., Ltd, uses the AWS infrastructure platform to process vast
amount of large data sets easily and cost-effectively. Using Amazon
Elastic Map Reduce, SUUMO's cloud-based data analysis enables them to
complete analysis of 1 billion logs in only 10 minutes. This rapid speed
of processing to support their scale helps them to continuously enhance
their customer experience and service offerings. Recruit is currently
running multiple projects in the new AWS Tokyo Region in preparation for
launching new services to Japanese customers.
In addition to a broad base of Japanese customers, AWS has a vibrant
partner ecosystem in Japan that has built innovative solutions and
services on AWS's pay-as-you-go infrastructure. These partners include:
Accenture Japan, Business Architects, CSK, EC-One, Hitachi Solutions,
ISID, Intramart CSI, Iret (Cloudpack), JB Advanced Technology, Manabing,
MITSUI KNOWLEDGE INDUSTRY CO. LTD, Nomura Research and Institute (NRI),
Serverworks, TIS (Sonic Garden), Toshiba, WingArc Technologies and Works
Applications. AWS works with global ISVs such as Adobe, BitRock, Engine
Yard, enStratus, Esri, IBM, Novell, Oracle, RightScale, Riverbed,
SOASTA. These ISVs have made or will soon be making their software
services available on AWS in the new Tokyo Region, making it even easier
for Japanese companies to take full advantage of enterprise class
software on AWS cloud.
Developers and businesses can access AWS services from the new Tokyo
Region beginning today, including Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon
EC2), Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3), Amazon Elastic Block
Store (Amazon EBS), Amazon SimpleDB, Amazon Relational Database Service
(Amazon RDS), Amazon Simple Queue Service (Amazon SQS), Amazon Simple
Notification Service (Amazon SNS), Amazon Route 53, Amazon CloudFront,
Amazon CloudWatch and AWS CloudFormation. More details on each of these
services and specific pricing for each is available at http://aws.amazon.com/products/
and http://aws.amazon.com/jp/products.
About Amazon.com
Amazon.com, Inc. (NASDAQ: AMZN), a Fortune 500 company based in Seattle,
opened on the World Wide Web in July 1995 and today offers Earth's
Biggest Selection. Amazon.com,
Inc. seeks to be Earth's most customer-centric company, where customers
can find and discover anything they might want to buy online, and
endeavors to offer its customers the lowest possible prices. Amazon.com
and other sellers offer millions of unique new, refurbished and used
items in categories such as Books; Movies, Music & Games; Digital
Downloads; Electronics & Computers; Home & Garden; Toys, Kids & Baby;
Grocery; Apparel, Shoes & Jewelry; Health & Beauty; Sports & Outdoors;
and Tools, Auto & Industrial. Amazon Web Services provides Amazon's
developer customers with access to in-the-cloud infrastructure services
based on Amazon's own back-end technology platform, which developers can
use to enable virtually any type of business. Kindle, Kindle 3G and
Kindle DX are the revolutionary portable readers that wirelessly
download books, magazines, newspapers, blogs and personal documents to a
crisp, high-resolution electronic ink display that looks and reads like
real paper. Kindle 3G and Kindle DX utilize the same 3G wireless
technology as advanced cell phones, so users never need to hunt for a
Wi-Fi hotspot. Kindle is the #1 bestselling product across the millions
of items sold on Amazon.
Amazon and its affiliates operate websites, including www.amazon.com,
www.amazon.co.uk,
www.amazon.de,
www.amazon.co.jp,
www.amazon.fr,
www.amazon.ca,
www.amazon.cn,
and www.amazon.it.
As used herein, "Amazon.com," "we," "our" and similar terms include Amazon.com,
Inc., and its subsidiaries, unless the context indicates otherwise.
Forward-Looking Statements
This announcement contains forward-looking statements within the meaning
of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Actual results may differ significantly
from management's expectations. These forward-looking statements involve
risks and uncertainties that include, among others, risks related to
competition, management of growth, new products, services and
technologies, potential fluctuations in operating results, international
expansion, outcomes of legal proceedings and claims, fulfillment center
optimization, seasonality, commercial agreements, acquisitions and
strategic transactions, foreign exchange rates, system interruption,
inventory, government regulation and taxation, payments and fraud. More
information about factors that potentially could affect Amazon.com's
financial results is included in Amazon.com's
filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission, including its most
recent Annual Report on Form 10-K and subsequent filings.

SOURCE: Amazon Web Services LLC
Amazon.com, Inc.
Media Hotline, 206-266-7180
www.amazon.com/pr