From Teaching Grants and Free AWS Credits for Selected Research Projects to Tutorials for Students, AWS in Education Connects the Creativity of the Academic Community with the Flexibility of the AWS Cloud
SEATTLE--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Apr. 29, 2009--
Amazon Web Services LLC (AWS), a subsidiary of Amazon.com, Inc.
(NASDAQ:AMZN), today announced AWS in Education, a set of programs that
enable the academic community to easily leverage the benefits of Amazon
Web Services for teaching and research. With AWS in Education,
educators, academic researchers, and students worldwide can obtain free
usage credits to tap into the on-demand infrastructure of Amazon Web
Services to teach advanced courses, tackle research endeavors and
explore new projects – tasks that previously would have required
expensive investments in infrastructure. AWS in Education also provides
self-directed learning resources on cloud computing for students. To
sign up and begin using Amazon Web Services, and to apply for grants for
usage credits, visit: http://aws.amazon.com/education
“The flexibility and instant scalability of the AWS cloud have made it a
popular environment for teaching courses and tackling research projects
in basic programming, application development, distributed computing,
and more,” said Adam Selipsky, Vice President of Product Management and
Developer Relations for Amazon Web Services. “Whether giving students
experience in cloud computing or assisting in sophisticated research,
AWS in Education makes it easy to get going.”
AWS for Educators
To assist educators in bringing the cloud to the classroom, AWS is
offering grants of $100 per student for free usage of AWS infrastructure
services in eligible courses at accredited universities. Faculty can
apply for these grants via a simple online form and provide their
students with hands-on access to the same infrastructure services used
by software developers and IT staffs around the world.
"In Fall 2008, we moved Harvard's 300-student introductory Computer
Science course into the cloud via Amazon EC2,” said David J. Malan,
Lecturer on Computer Science, Harvard University. “Our goals were both
technical and pedagogical. As Computer Scientists, we wanted full
control over our course's infrastructure so that we could install
software at will and respond to problems at any hour. As teachers, we
wanted easier access to our students' work as well as the ability to
grow and shrink our infrastructure as problem sets' computational
requirements demanded. Moreover, because of AWS we were able to
integrate into the course's own syllabus discussion of scalability,
virtualization, multi-core processing, and cloud computing itself. What
better way to teach topics like those than to have students actually
experience them."
“Using AWS for our Web 2.0 Application Development courses has been a
phenomenal resource,” said Armando Fox, Adjunct Associate Professor,
University of California, Berkeley. “Administration was so easy that
students were able to get their projects deployed quickly, and venture
capitalists attending the final project demos were impressed at the
level of polish and creativity that a small student team could produce
in just a few weeks.”
AWS for Academic Researchers
Increasing numbers of academic researchers are leveraging Amazon Web
Services to accelerate research and advance study in a variety of
fields. Beginning immediately, AWS will selectively award grants for AWS
service credits to make it even easier for higher learning institutions
to conduct important research. Each quarter, AWS will evaluate proposals
and award grants to researchers at accredited universities based on
factors such as the uniqueness and usefulness of the project, use of AWS
within the project, and potential to attain matching funds from other
organizations interested in the project.
“The Malaria Atlas Project is an ambitious collaboration between
international malaria scientists with one specific aim: to make detailed
global maps of malaria to help drive the fight against the disease,”
said Dr. Pete Gething, Department of Zoology at the University of
Oxford. “Current knowledge is surprisingly patchy and this hampers
efforts to target funds and resources to the people that need them most.
Our research grant from Amazon Web Services means we now have access to
the kind of serious parallel processing that we need to implement our
work in feasible timescales and the storage to deal with the massive
output of that work.”
AWS for Students
For students and student organizations, AWS is a valuable platform for
completing coursework, supporting individual projects, or for exploring
the reliability, scalability, and cost effectiveness of an in-the-cloud
technology infrastructure. Amazon has made a number of tutorials
available online to help students begin exploring cloud computing
concepts in a self-directed manner. These tutorials include advanced
computing topics such as asynchronous messaging, consensus algorithms,
priority queues, and more. In addition, Amazon will accept proposals
from individual students or student groups at accredited universities
and will award AWS free usage grants for worthy individual or group
projects.
“The grant we have received from the AWS in Education program will
dramatically increase the reach of my student group's collaboration with
the National Federation of the Blind (NFB) to develop distributed
assistive computer vision technology for the visually impaired,” said
Serge Belongie, Associate Professor at the University of California in
San Diego.
"AWS is a great fit for 3 Day Startup, an event where 40 student
entrepreneurs take a web startup from the drawing board to a launched
prototype in 60 intense hours. With Amazon EC2 and Amazon S3 on our
side, we can go live in minutes without worrying about configuration,
reliability, and most importantly, scalability,” said Thomas
Finsterbusch, PhD candidate at the University of Texas in Austin.
Educators, academic researchers and students worldwide can apply for
grants by filling out the online application at http://aws.amazon.com/education
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