AWS Startups Blog
Tag: Company Profile
How Robot Care Systems Developed a Smarter Walker
Robot Care Systems has built a robotic walker designed to provide additional safety and stability to users.
Read MoreHow AWS Helps Skylight Build Weather Reports for Aviation Companies
Who likes to talk about the weather? Pilots. In fact they need to do a lot more than talk about the weather. They need to know the data from the inside out.
Read MoreSimplifying Secondary Data Storage Applications with Cohesity
Founded in 2013, Cohesity has created a platform to consolidate secondary data, such as backups, files, objects, test/dev, and analytics.
Read MoreFor Tigera’s Ratan Tipirneni, Technology is the Easy Part
Tigera, a San Francisco-based software company founded in 2016, helps businesses secure and provide compliance for their container-based applications.
Read MoreApplying AI to Procurement and Finance Data on AWS
In the fall of 2016, Jeff Gerber, Suplari’s co-founder and CTO, approached me with a simple solution to a growing business problem. He had noticed that most data within organizations was too siloed, making it hard to surface basic analytics.
Read MoreHow Auris Leveraged AWS SageMaker to Help Marketers with Machine Learning
When we started GenY Labs a couple of years ago, infrastructure was one of the biggest challenges for us. It wasn’t easy to find machine learning-tuned hardware.
Read MoreWhy Brex Chose Elixir
Almost every engineer that starts at Brex asks, “Why are we using Elixir?” It’s a question with an interesting answer, and one that we thought a lot about before we even began building Brex.
Read MoreHow DroneInch Builds Software for Autonomous Drones
Founded in 2017, DroneInch builds software for remote autonomous flight of off-the-shelf drones.
Read MoreBehind the Scenes of Nuna Health with Clint Talbert
To hear Clint Talbert, Nuna’s Head of Government Engineering & Data Science, speak about trust is to understand how vital it is to the healthcare technology company.
Read MoreHow Vice Media Tamed 12 Verticals in 18 Different Languages
VICE had a large-scale problem to solve. Their ecosystem had become too large in terms of the number of brands they supported—they currently have sites in 35 different countries in 18 languages, which read in different characters and directions—and their engineering team wanted to make sure the reading experience worked well for everyone.
Read More