| What is Amazon's interest in this ? I hope this is good news for the Blender Development Fund, but I'm scared of the possible consequences. I suppose we may end up seeing Blender Cloud offering remote renders using AWS's infrastructure, which is good news unless it means tying the rendering engines to Amazon tech. For context, here is a brief overview of the 2019 financial report of the Blender foundation : - 33% of income (316 k€) from individual sponsors - 28% of income (267 k€) from EPIC Games - 27% of income (257 k€) from other corporate sponsors - highest salary: 58.4 k€ - lowest salary: 32.5 k€ (55% of highest) - 43% of expenses (416 k€) were salaries I really like Blender, and seeing it thrive in the last years has brought me immense pleasure. I hope that I have the chance to work with Blender again, and benefit from the recent improvements. Congratulations to the Blender Development Fund for this new sponsor, which I hope will bring value to the project. |
Look up AWS Thinkbox.
Creatives have been rendering on AWS GPUs for a while now with automation tools like Brenda (in case of Blender), and Amazon is clearly looking to capture that market with a more comprehensive and user-friendly solution locked into their infrastructure. Would help sell more computing resources and all that.
They have folks like SideFX and Autodesk on board, and a year ago I thought I’d seen Adobe but it’s not listed—either my memory is playing tricks on me, or Adobe left to compete with a platform of their own.