Off-Prem

Edge + IoT

AWS sent edgy appliance to the ISS and it worked – just like all the other computers up there

Congrats, AWS, you’ve boldly gone where the Raspberry Pi has already been


Amazon Web Services has proudly revealed that the first completely private expedition to the International Space Station carried one of its Snowcone storage appliances, and that the device worked as advertised.

The Snowcone is a rugged shoebox-sized unit packed full of disk drives – specifically 14 terabytes of solid-state disk – a pair of VCPUs and 4GB of RAM. The latter two components mean the Snowcone can run either EC2 instances or apps written with AWS’s Greengrass IoT product. In either case, the idea is that you take a Snowcone into out-of-the-way places where connectivity is limited, collect data in situ and do some pre-processing on location. Once you return to a location where bandwidth is plentiful, it's assumed you'll upload the contents of a Snowcone into AWS and do real work on it there.

Alibaba Cloud challenges AWS with its own custom smartNIC

READ MORE

AWS sent this Snowcone aloft with the crewed Axiom Space mission to the ISS in April 2022. The four astronauts conducted a variety of experiments during their 17-day rotation, which stored data on the Snowcone.

AWS hardened the device to ensure it could survive the trip. Axiom and AWS were able to communicate with the device, which worked as intended and processed data it stored. The cloud colossus has hailed this achievement as proving that processing data on Snowcones can work even in edge locations as extreme as the ISS.

Which is true and yay and all. But let's not forget that the ISS houses myriad computers and has done for years. Running a computer up there does require a combination of rocket science and computer science, but humanity has already well and truly proven it can put them both to work on the space station.

Even for computers that are far more modest than an AWS Snowcone – such as the Raspberry Pi.

The Pi Foundation and the European Space Agency have sent several AstroPi machines to the ISS. Just like AWS, those units were prepared especially for the rigors of space travel and were used to run multiple workloads.

The Pi guys even revealed an updated design last year, and this week reported the two units sent aloft in late 2021 have now run 17,168 programs written by young people from 26 countries.

The Register leaves the decision about which is the more impressive and/or inspiring achievement to you. ®

Send us news
10 Comments

Ransomware crew abuses AWS native encryption, sets data-destruct timer for 7 days

'Codefinger' crims on the hunt for compromised keys

Raspberry Pi hands out prizes to all in the RP2350 Hacking Challenge

Power-induced glitches, lasers, and electromagnetic fields are all tools of the trade

India becomes just fourth country to dock satellites in orbit

As the ESA celebrates planned break-up of its solar blotter-spotter

The ultimate Pi 5 arrives carrying 16GB ... and a price to match

How much RAM does an enthusiast really need?

Boeing going backwards as production’s slowing and woes keep flowing

No such problems at Airbus, which cruised at a high level and shipped almost two planes a day last year

Celebrating when EVs went to the Moon with a Lego Lunar Roving Vehicle build

Even better use for the Technic range than the Mars Rover – with one big caveat

AWS adds 32-vCPU option and an easier on-ramp to its cloudy desktops

Weirdly, this shows the weakness of hosted Windows with an admission about vidchats

SpaceX resets ‘Days Since Starship Exploded’ counter to zero

Test flight seven did better on the ground with a successful booster catch – as aircraft divert from falling debris

Blue Origin gives up on New Glenn lift-off, 2 hours into launch window

Vehicle subsystem concerns blamed for scrub

Looming energy crunch makes future uncertain for datacenters

But investors still betting big on bit barns thanks to AI and cloud demand

AWS follows Iceberg path to unite analytics platform

But other obstacles remain before developers get free choice of storage and analytics engines

Axiom Space shuffles space station assembly sequence – to get it standalone sooner

Aiming to be freeflying by 2028. Handy if anything should happen to the ISS