A global leader in scalable blockchain architecture for enterprise organisations, one that is described ad “well-suited” for supply chains, has become only the fifth blockchain company in the world to be designated as an Amazon Advanced Technology Partner.

Ternio announced in a statement this week that it had been accepted as an Amazon Advanced APN Technology Partner due to its patent-pending Lexicon framework. Lexicon is the only scalable blockchain framework capable of supporting over one million transactions per second, fully decentralised and on-chain.

Lexicon is also “well-suited” for internal and external supply chains handling large data sets or large volumes of small data sets. Built upon HyperLedger Fabric, Lexicon supports Ethereum EVM bytecode smart contracts.

Being approved as an Amazon Advanced APN Technology Partner allows any Amazon AWS client to access and leverage Ternio’s Lexicon frame and deeply a scalable blockchain solution within a cloud-based environment.

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We're very excited about being accepted as an AWS Advanced Partner, making us one of only five blockchain companies in the world with this designation," said Daniel Gouldman, CEO of Ternio. "Now, any enterprise client from a small start-up to the U.S. federal government can deploy our blockchain technology at scale on AWS."

Amazon APN Technology Partners include Independent Software Vendors (ISVs), SaaS, PaaS, developer tools, management and security vendors. Once approved, partners will gain access to tools, training and support that enables them to successfully build their solutions on AWS.

"Ternio has automated the deployment of Lexicon onto Amazon AWS' Managed Kubernetes Service, EKS," said Corey Ballou, who leads blockchain development at Ternio. "Pairing Lexicon with EKS was a natural choice for us. Coupling Kubernetes with Amazon's underlying service offerings affords us the speed, security, scalability and availability we require. It allowed us to architect and automate the deployment of production-level Hyperledger Fabric clusters in a manner that is highly available and auto-scalable. We've also been able to implement Elastic Block Storage (EBS) auto-scaling to support the need for large, immutable datasets."