Apr 24, 2018 at 16:44 // News

Coin Idol Author

Amazon has become one of the recent well-known companies to join the blockchain technology area. On April 19, the electronic commerce giant introduced AWS Blockchain Templates in a blog post. It aims at simplifying the process of creating blockchain-based projects.



The Amazon’s blog post states:

“With AWS Blockchain Templates, you can deploy Ethereum and Hyperledger Fabric frameworks using managed and certified AWS CloudFormation templates. AWS Blockchain Templates allow you to focus on building your blockchain applications instead of spending time and energy on manual setup of your blockchain network.”



Launched on Thursday, the initiative offers customers pre-set patterns consisting of two versions of blockchain: Ethereum and the Linux Foundation’s Hyperledger Fabric.

How It Works



Each user can choose a platform where to place his framework. It can be an Amazon Elastic Container Service (ECS) cluster or an EC2 instance based on the Docker platform.

Having signed up for AWS, you are free from any additional charge for using the financial technology system. However, you still have to pay for the resources that company uses to make networks work. The templates will be supported in any region, according to Amazon.

The company also gave a detailed instruction on the fintech and its functions in a separate post.

Purpose of the Project



The Blockchain tech behind cryptocurrencies like bitcoin and litecoin is revolutionary as it withdraws an intermediary source, for example, a bank, by making a quick and safe record of all money proceedings.

“Some of the people that I talk to see blockchains as the foundation of a new monetary system and a way to facilitate international payments. Others see blockchains as a distributed ledger and immutable data source that can be applied to logistics, supply chain, land registration, crowdfunding and other use cases. Either way, it’s clear that there are a lot of intriguing possibilities and we are working to help our customers use this technology more effectively," AWS vice president Jeff Barr explained.

