When I entered
college
in 1978, the state of the art in
campus computing consisted of a room full of
IBM 029 Key Punch
machines, an
IBM 370 Model 168
mainframe, and job queues where my card deck would wait for hours
in order to get a few seconds of precious CPU time. Today's
kids have it a lot easier, first with desktop PCs and now
with cloud computing providing them access to as many
CPU cycles and as much RAM as they need for their
class projects and research.
Our new
AWS in Education
program is designed to allow the academic community to take
advantage of the
Amazon Web Services
for teaching and for research. Educators,
academic researchers, students, and student entrepreneurs
from all over the world can apply for free AWS usage
credits in the form of teaching grants, research grants,
and project grants. Read on to learn more about what we've
put together.
We are supporting Researchers by providing selected
research projects with grants. The grants offer free access to
all of the AWS infrastructure services, giving researchers
access to large amounts of compute power and storage in the
AWS cloud. Researchers can focus on their work, avoiding the
need to specify, procure, purchase, install, and operate
hardware.
We will evaluate academic research support proposals
from active
faculty at accredited colleges and universities throughout the
year
here,
review them with care, and make awards 4 times
a year. The next deadline
is May 15th; recipients will be notified on June 5th.
We've already made grants to the
University of Oxford's
Malaria Atlas project and
the
RAD Lab at the
University of California Berkeley.
Educators have access to Teaching Grants so that they can
use
AWS
in their courses on topics like distributed computing, artificial
intelligence, data structures and the like. The grants
provide educators with up to $100 in AWS usage credits per
eligible student. Educators from accredited universities can
apply for a grant by filling out
this form. An active
AWS account
is a prerequisite; we can support one or two concurrent
classes per educator.
The Teaching Grants can be used for coursework and for student
projects. Supported AWS services include
Amazon EC2,
Amazon S3,
Amazon SimpleDB,
Amazon SQS,
Amazon CloudFront,
and Amazon Elastic MapReduce.
Courses are already underway at several universities including
the
University of Maryland
and
Harvard.
Finally, IT Professionals on campus can also take advantage
of cloud computing. We're working with a number of AWS education
solution providers:
Moonwalk specializes in
large-scale data management solutions. Their products are used in
the Banking, Healthcare, Government, R&D, Education, and
Aerospace indudstries.
Sonian provides
educational institutions
with a secure, scalable and affordable
hosted Email Archiving and eDiscover service running within the AWS cloud.
I'm thrilled that we are able to support more of the great work that's
taking place on college and university campuses around the world; I look
forward to hearing about some great success stories!
-- Jeff;