It enables glitch-free Netflix streaming. It hosts digital drug-design tools of the kind that led to Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine. The Seahawks use its computing power to analyze game data. It stores a digital repository of King County’s archives. And even The Seattle Times relies on it to make sure the website doesn’t crash during surges of reader traffic.
What is it?
It’s Amazon Web Services (AWS).
The massively successful Amazon division, which opened for business 15 years ago, doesn’t have the same consumer cachet as two-day shipping or Prime Video. “Cloud computing”? Gobbledygook to many.
Yet the importance of AWS to the company, consumers and the global internet economy is difficult to overstate. Internally, the division is Amazon’s cash cow, making up 59% of the company’s $22.9 billion profit before interest and taxes in 2020, despite accounting for just 12% of Amazon’s revenue. AWS infrastructure also supports Amazon logistics, helping route more than 2.5 billion packages every year to the right address (most of the time), not to mention nearly all of Amazon’s other operations.
On a wider scale, the launch of AWS revolutionized the economics of web-based business by creating a $300 billion industry, cloud computing. Nearly every large company and government agency in the country uses some form of cloud-computing services, according to research firm IDG.