Two tech giants just made a move that could reshape how blockchain infrastructure operates. Amazon and Google rolled out a multicloud service that lets users spin up private, high-speed connections between their cloud platforms in literal minutes—not the weeks it used to take.
This matters more than it sounds. For Web3 projects juggling workloads across different cloud providers, this kind of seamless interoperability means faster deployments and way less friction. Node operators, dApp developers, anyone running heavy computational tasks—they're the real winners here. Suddenly cross-cloud architecture doesn't feel like such a headache anymore.
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consensus_failure
· 4h ago
Well, the days of node operation and maintenance will be a bit easier now, but we still have to see if the gas fees can keep up.
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StakoorNeverSleeps
· 4h ago
Alright, the actions of Amazon and Google this time are indeed interesting, but to put it bluntly, it's just burning money for speed; the ones who will truly benefit are still those big projects.
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RatioHunter
· 4h ago
What used to take weeks can now be done in just a few minutes? If this really works, node operators will be laughing their heads off... However, these two giants usually don't cut corners on infrastructure, so it really feels like changes are coming to Web3.
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UncommonNPC
· 4h ago
AWS and GCP teaming up? Now node operators can be less troubled, finally.
Two tech giants just made a move that could reshape how blockchain infrastructure operates. Amazon and Google rolled out a multicloud service that lets users spin up private, high-speed connections between their cloud platforms in literal minutes—not the weeks it used to take.
This matters more than it sounds. For Web3 projects juggling workloads across different cloud providers, this kind of seamless interoperability means faster deployments and way less friction. Node operators, dApp developers, anyone running heavy computational tasks—they're the real winners here. Suddenly cross-cloud architecture doesn't feel like such a headache anymore.