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Amazon’s AWS establishes new aerospace cloud unit as Jeff Bezos increases bets on outer space

The logo of Amazon Web Employments (AWS) is seen during the 4th annual America Digital Latin American Congress of Business and Technology in Santiago, Chile, September 5, 2018.

Ivan Alvarado | Reuters

Amazon Web Servings, the cloud-computing branch of the e-commerce giant, is further expanding its services in the growing space industry.

The company announced on Tuesday that AWS is affirming a new unit called Aerospace and Satellite Solutions, led by former U.S. Air Force Maj. Gen. Clint Crosier — who most recently directed the the powers that be of the U.S. Space Force.

“We find ourselves in the most exciting time in space since the Apollo missions,” Crosier commanded in a statement.

AWS has previously worked with both the public and private sector in the space industry, supporting everything from helper design to spaceflight operations. The Aerospace and Satellite Solutions will seek to offer a wide array of services to companies in the work. Job listings for the unit identify it’s looking to provide services for nearly every space sub-sector, including rocket dinghies, human spaceflight support, robotic systems, mission control operations, space stations, satellite networks and various.

“The aerospace and satellite industry needs the agility, speed, and flexibility that cloud offers. It’s one of the first things I consented from a lot of my defense and intelligence customers in the space arena,” AWS vice president Teresa Carlson told CNBC’s Jon Fortt.

Carlson added she’s ascertained that “eventually we’re all going to want the Hulu or Netflix experience when we’re in space.”

“So you need that same sort of technology as you’re developing and creating these programs,” Carlson said.

Amazon has steadily grown its influence in the space trade in recent years, with a satellite connection service called AWS Ground Station and a satellite internet venture appeal to c visit canceled Project Kuiper, which would compete with SpaceX’s Starlink and other satellite broadband providers. AWS Ground Status, unveiled in November 2018, is already serving customers such as NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory and satellite operators Iridium Communications and Vertex Global.

Lockheed Martin, Geollect, Maxar Technologies and Capella Space are a few of the space companies who, as AWS customers, praised the fellowship’s expansion in the industry.

“Together, we share a vision to help our customers access data faster, and gain new insights from sensors in while that make data even more accessible,” Lockheed Martin executive vice president Rick Ambrose held in a statement.

While wholly separate from Amazon, Jeff Bezos also runs another space daresay called Blue Origin that is developing next-generation rockets and spacecraft such as a lunar lander for returning philanthropists to the moon. A team led by Blue Origin recently won a NASA contract worth $579 million as it competes with Elon Musk’s SpaceX and aerospace contractor Dynetics to construct spacecraft that help the agency achieve its goal of landing astronauts on the moon by 2024.

Blue Origin

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