In this blog we demonstrate how to create an offline-first application with optimistic UI using AWS Amplify, AWS AppSync, and MongoDB Atlas. Developers design offline first applications to work without requiring an active internet connection. Optimistic UI then builds on top of the offline first approach by updating the UI with expected data changes, without […]| Amazon Web Services
AWS Amplify Hosting has built web applications using a fixed instance environment. As applications grow more complex and require intensive build processes for dependency management, asset optimization, and comprehensive testing, developers need more powerful build environments to maintain productivity and deployment speed. Today, we’re excited to introduce customizable build instances for Amplify Hosting. This update […]| Amazon Web Services
In a enterprise landscape, custom applications play a critical role in improving operations, enhancing productivity, and centralizing knowledge within the organization. However, these tools often lack intelligent, conversational interfaces that help users access relevant information faster and more intuitively. Traditional dashboards and search bars fall short when it comes to interpreting complex queries or surfacing […]| Amazon Web Services
https://hidekazu-konishi.com/entry/aws_amplify_features_focusing_on_static_website_hosting.html AWS Amplify Features Focusing on Static Website Hosting - Relationship and Differences between AWS Amplify Hosting and AWS Amplify CLI.| Hidekazu Konishi - Profile / Biography | hidekazu-konishi.com
https://hidekazu-konishi.com/entry/using_aws_amplify_cli_for_static_website_hosting.html Host a Static Website configured with Amazon S3 and Amazon CloudFront using AWS Amplify CLI.| Hidekazu Konishi - Profile / Biography | hidekazu-konishi.com
https://hidekazu-konishi.com/entry/using_aws_amplify_hosting.html Host a Static Website using AWS Amplify Hosting in the AWS Amplify Console.| Hidekazu Konishi - Profile / Biography | hidekazu-konishi.com
A common challenge in web application development and deployment is version skew between client and server resources. Today, we’re excited to announce deployment skew protection for applications deployed to AWS Amplify Hosting. This feature helps verifies end users have a seamless experience during application deployments. The Challenge Modern web applications are complex systems comprising numerous […]| Front-End Web & Mobile
AWS Amplify Hosting has now made it possible to connect many more Amplify apps to a single repository. This change improves the way developers can integrate with Git providers which is especially beneficial for monorepo architectures. Amplify now uses a single webhook per repository for all associated apps, streamlining the development workflow. For specific limit […]| Amazon Web Services
Today, AWS Amplify Hosting is introducing compute roles for AWS Amplify applications, enabling you to extend server-side rendering capabilities with secure access to AWS services from the compute runtime. With compute roles, developers can attach specific permissions to their server-side rendered apps, allowing Amplify to make authorized calls to other AWS services. This new capability […]| Amazon Web Services
Introduction In today’s data-driven digital ecosystem, building scalable search solutions has become essential for organizations managing large, complex datasets across industries. Whether it’s a streaming platform, an e-commerce marketplace, or a research database, the ability to efficiently search through structured and unstructured data is key to delivering a seamless user experience. Traditional search solutions often […]| Amazon Web Services
AWS Amplify, Amazon Bedrock, and Amazon OpenSearch can be combined to create an AI-powered search engine for manufacturing that breaks down data silos, enabling faster and more accurate access to critical information across defect logs, operational data, and cost analyses, improving decision-making and operational efficiency.| Front-End Web & Mobile
As we kick off 2025, I wanted to take a moment to highlight the top posts from 2024. Without further ado, here are the 10 front-end web and mobile blog posts of 2024. Fullstack TypeScript Reintroducing AWS Amplify – This blog post announces the general availability of AWS Amplify Gen 2, a fullstack TypeScript experience […]| Front-End Web & Mobile
Modern application development has shifted to include not just tooling that offers a great developer experience (DX), but a sensible balance between simply getting started and the path to production. It is this very sentiment that inspired the release of Amplify AI kit. This abstraction over common AI tasks like conversing with a large language […]| Front-End Web & Mobile
With the announcement of the Amplify AI kit, we learned how to build custom UI components, conversation history and add external data to the conversation flow. In this blog post, we will learn how to build a travel planner application using React Native. The application will generate responses using Retrieval Augmented Generation (RAG) and Large […]| Front-End Web & Mobile
We are delighted to share with you a brand new experience for file storage using AWS Amplify! This powerful storage solution seamlessly integrates with Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3) and offers developers greater control and flexibility over their file structure via Amplify’s fullstack TypeScript developer experience. Whether you’re an experienced developer or new to […]| Amazon Web Services
We are thrilled to announce the general availability of AWS Amplify Gen 2, a fullstack TypeScript experience for building cloud-connected apps. AWS Amplify helps you accomplish two jobs: Host your web app Build and connect to a cloud backend With Amplify Gen 2, every part of your app’s cloud backend is defined in TypeScript. Need […]| Amazon Web Services
AWS Amplify just announced a public preview of a new code-first developer experience that empowers frontend developers to quickly build and deploy fullstack apps with their existing TypeScript or Javascript skills. The first generation of the tooling offered a tooling-first experience, using a CLI/Console-based interactive workflow to create a backend. Gen 2 transitions to a […]| Amazon Web Services