AWS
subsidiary of Amazon that provides on-demand cloud computing platforms on a metered pay-as-you-go basis
What podcasters actually say about AWS.
163 mentions, no marketing. Save them all to a pod and ask any question.
Common Themes
Videos Mentioning AWS

The Tom Bilyeu Show LIVE | Join US! 5.22.26
Tom Bilyeu
Cited as an example of Amazon's revolutionary impact on industries beyond just shipping.

Stanford CS153 Frontier Systems | The Road Ahead: Resilience Required
Stanford Online
The vulnerability found by hackers at Uber was related to the configuration of their AWS services and old databases.

Anthropic's Digital God, Pope vs AI, Job Loss Narrative Flips, Open Source Crackdown Coming?
All-In Podcast
Amazon Web Services, mentioned as a cloud provider from which Kubernetes helps migrate workflows.

A rational conversation on where AI is actually going | Benedict Evans
Lenny's Podcast
Amazon Web Services, used as an analogy for cloud platforms that don't necessarily create strong network effects for the underlying infrastructure compared to operating systems like Windows.

Why AI Agents Need Context | Deep Dives with a16z
a16z Deep Dives
Mentioned as a cloud vendor and as a platform where Fiverr's networking dashboard shows surprisingly low data movement.

OpenAI CFO Sarah Friar on IPO, AI Rivalries, New Device, and Spending $100B+ on Compute
All-In Podcast
Amazon Web Services is listed as one of the CSPs OpenAI now utilizes.

Reimagining Biotech with Jake Becraft of Strand Therapeutics — Tim’s Founder Kitchen
Tim Ferriss
Described as a $25 billion behemoth that arose as a 'side hustle' within Amazon, exemplifying a successful platform and infrastructure play that contributed to Amazon's massive growth.

Ex-Amazon VP: Do This at Work to Get Promoted Fast | Ethan Evans
BigDeal by Codie Sanchez
Jeff Bezos's signature business, which took over 15 years to become a multi-billion dollar business, exemplifying strategic patience.

Scaling Past Informal AI - Carina Hong, Axiom Math
Latent Space
Has a strong push for automated reasoning due to enterprise customers requiring 100% verified solutions and where general testing is insufficient.

What Does Palantir Actually Want?
ColdFusion
A competitor offering solutions in the data processing and cloud services market.

Thomas Laffont: The $4T AI IPO Wave Is Coming… and We’ve Never Seen Anything Like It
All-In Podcast
A cloud computing service that OpenAI and Anthropic are projected to surpass in valuation.

Stanford CS25: Transformers United V6 I Serving Transformers: Lessons from the Trenches
Stanford Online
Mentioned in the context of trusting models with sensitive accounts like the root account for monitoring setup.

How Legora Went From YC to $100M ARR in 18 Months
Y Combinator
Mentioned in the context of how companies like MongoDB successfully competed against it by focusing on unique product development.

Stanford MS&E435 Economics of the AI Supercycle | Spring 2026 | Applications, Applied AI
Stanford Online
Amazon Web Services, a major cloud provider mentioned as a common first choice for founders before they realize the benefits of specialized inference stacks like Base 10 offers.

What Does Palantir Actually Want? (Re-upload)
ColdFusion
Amazon Web Services, a cloud computing platform providing data solutions that compete with Palantir.

The Age Of The 40-Year-Old Solo Founder Is Here
Y Combinator
Mentioned in the context of hosting websites before cloud computing, specifically in relation to Screed's early hosting on a physical server.

Stanford MS&E435 Economics of the AI Supercycle | Spring 2026 | Applications, Coding AI
Stanford Online
Amazon Web Services, cited as a traditional cloud provider that Vercel aimed to improve upon in terms of developer experience.

Open Source Wins, AGI Is Here, and Scorsese’s AI Toolkit with CEOs of Cerebras & Black Forest Labs
All-In Podcast
Amazon Web Services, used as an analogy for early adoption and experimentation with new technology.

Podcast Crossover: AIE, AGI, frontier lab strategy with @matthew_berman and @swyxtv
Latent Space
Amazon Web Services, mentioned as an example of a cloud provider where concentrating on one platform can yield economies of scale.