Amazon has rolled out a new service called Deadline Cloud, aimed at enabling customers to establish, deploy, and scale graphics and visual effects rendering pipelines on AWS cloud infrastructure. Timed for the upcoming National Association of Broadcasters conference in Las Vegas, the service targets the media and entertainment industry.
According to Antony Passemard, AWS General Manager of creative tools, Deadline Cloud caters to customers in media, entertainment, architecture, and engineering by leveraging AWS compute to render content for various applications such as TV shows, movies, ads, video games, and digital blueprints.
Passemard highlighted the increasing demand for tools that facilitate cloud-based rendering in the media and entertainment sector, citing a shift where the demand for high-quality visual effects and content generated using generative AI surpasses customers’ compute capacity.
With a start-up wizard guiding customers through the setup process, Deadline Cloud simplifies the establishment of a render farm by determining instance types based on project size and duration and configuring permissions. The service provisions Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud instances, manages network and compute infrastructure, and seamlessly integrates with on-premises compute for rendering jobs.
The dashboard offered by Deadline Cloud enables customers to monitor logs, preview ongoing render jobs, and manage costs effectively. Moreover, customers can link their third-party software licenses with the service or opt for usage-based licensing for rendering with existing tools like Autodesk Maya, Foundry Nuke, and SideFX Houdini.
Passemard emphasized that Deadline Cloud empowers creative teams to enhance content pipelines’ efficiency, enabling them to accept more projects, meet tight deadlines, and deliver high-quality content promptly.
Deadline Cloud is currently available in several AWS server regions, including U.S. East (Ohio, North Virginia), U.S. West (Oregon), Asia Pacific (Singapore, Sydney, Tokyo), and Europe (Frankfurt, Ireland).
While cloud-based rendering is not a new concept, the COVID-19 pandemic accelerated its adoption as remote work became prevalent. Deadline Cloud represents Amazon’s entry into the space, competing with existing platforms like Google Cloud-powered visual effects tooling and other cloud-based VFX infrastructure providers.