Skip to main content

The cloud's the future for Amazon Web Services

New business models are changing the ITS landscape as will be explained by Frank DiGiammarino of Amazon Web Services in his keynote presentation at 2:00pm
June 15, 2016 Read time: 3 mins
Frank DiGiammarino currently serves on the leadership team of the Worldwide Public Sector at Amazon Web Services as the Director of US State and Local Government.

New business models are changing the ITS landscape as will be explained by Frank DiGiammarino of Amazon Web Services in his keynote presentation at 2:00pm

Q: What will your keynote cover and why are these areas important?

A: The keynote will cover how cloud technology is enabling innovation across the transportation sector. Smart transportation solutions like smart parking, connected intersections, smart routing, fleet monitoring and connected vehicles are made possible through cloud technology. This is important across both the private and public sector, because infrastructure is critical to economic growth. Traditional infrastructure was the catalyst for growth in the 20th century, and similarly the digital age, including cloud technology, will be that catalyst for the 21st century surge.

Q: Why do you think being at ITS America as a keynote is important?

A: Amazon Web Services (AWS) is dedicated to our customers across all industries and our presence at events like ITS America is helping to educate and enable these organisations to innovate.

Q: How does AWS see the cloud infrastructure melding with the smart cities concepts?

A: Data is what truly makes a city “smart.” Cloud technology enables cities to collect, store, and analyse data of all kinds. The insights that can be derived through this analysis are limitless. Helping cities identify gaps, issues, and trends that will help them deploy their resources more effectively and focus on their mission.

Q: As a DOT Smart City Challenge contributor, why did AWS want to participate?

A: Cities are serving as hubs of innovation all across the globe and we are committed to supporting these customers on a number of fronts. By joining the DOT Smart City Challenge, we felt like we could uniquely contribute to their success by enabling their initiatives with a strong technology backbone that will be required to continue their pace of innovation.

Q: AWS can store a petabyte of info for almost anything...are you going to be the new business model for smart transportation?

A: Cloud technology is the new normal for smart transportation in the future. We are excited to see how our customers continue to innovate on the cloud, and use it as a driving force of their missions.

Frank DiGiammarino currently serves on the leadership team of the Worldwide Public Sector at Amazon Web Services as the Director of US State and Local Government. Previously at AWS, he was the Director of Innovation and Global Expansion where he led the development of a global strategy for bringing cloud to governments around the world while managing and growing high-performing sales teams.

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Connecticut Transit uses web feedback to improve user experience
    May 27, 2014
    Connecticut champions open government and open data to help fostertransparency, accountability and citizen engagement – and that includes transportation matters as Andrew Bardin Williams discovers. The last thing anyone wanted was to inconvenience or displace others - least of all people who lived and worked in the neighbourhood. Yet, workers in an office building in downtown New Haven, Conn., were tired of shuffling through hoards of people who kept sitting on the stoop to the building while waiting for th
  • Social media a one-stop shop for travel information
    January 20, 2012
    Exponentially widening mobile phone ownership is opening up the field to new ways of obtaining and disseminating better travel information from and to public transport users, via for example social media and tracking riders' phones. Over 50 US transit agencies, including major actors such as TriMet, in the metropolitan area of Portland, Oregon, Dallas Area Rapid Transit in Texas, and San Francisco's Bay Area Rapid Transit District (BART), as well as smaller operators, now have Facebook and/or Twitter accoun
  • Russia invests in ITS technology
    May 11, 2012
    Russia’s transport systems are developing on a grand scale with ITS central to the plans, thanks in no small part to a recently relaunched ITS Russia. Jon Masters interviews the organisation’s chief executive officer Vladimir Kryuchkov Over coming years many of the biggest deployments of new technology for transport are likely to be seen in Russia. For a political and economic superpower, the world’s biggest country has only recently started to harness ITS for the good of its transport networks. But the sca
  • Praise for Obama’s FY2016 budget
    February 5, 2015
    US Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx joined Google executive chairman Eric Schmidt at the Google Campus in California today where he discussed the budget and unveiled Beyond Traffic, a new US Department of Transportation (DOT) analysis outlining the trends that are likely to shape the needs of our transportation system over the next three decades. Beyond Traffic includes a strong focus on how ITS technologies, including vehicle-to-vehicle communication, vehicle automation and other new technologies are