AWS Architecture Blog

Bryan Berezdivin

Author: Bryan Berezdivin

Bryan is a World Wide Industry Lead for Autonomous Vehicles at Amazon Web Services (AWS). Bryan works with customers to accelerate their autonomous vehicle development with AWS services and ISV/SI partner solutions targeting incremental cost, time, and complexity optimizations on their system development approaches. Bryan leverages solutions for the entire development workflow from in vehicle components, AV ingest , processing and analytics, labeling, map development, simulations and validations, model and algorithm development, and orchestration and deployment. Bryan previously held senior leadership roles in product and solution management in a variety of industries including big data, HPC, cybersecurity, and IOT leveraging sensors, data processing, analytics, and machine learning mechanisms for the last 15 years.

Figure 1 - Architecture showing the DXC RoboticDrive Ingestor (RDI) solution

Ingesting Automotive Sensor Data using DXC RoboticDrive Ingestor on AWS

This post was co-written by Pawel Kowalski, a Technical Product Manager for DXC RoboticDrive and Dr. Max Böhm, a software and systems architect and DXC Distinguished Engineer. To build the first fully autonomous vehicle, L5 standard per SAE, auto-manufacturers collected sensor data from test vehicle fleets across the globe in their testing facilities and driving […]

Figure 3 : Reference Architecture for Hardware-in-the-Loop (HiL) Direct to Amazon S3

Field Notes: Implementing Hardware-in-the-Loop for Autonomous Driving Development on AWS

September 8, 2021: Amazon Elasticsearch Service has been renamed to Amazon OpenSearch Service. See details. Automotive customers use AWS as their platform for advanced driving assistance systems (ADAS) and autonomous driving (AD) development to accelerate their development cycles and experience faster time-to-market. In the blog post, Autonomous Vehicle and ADAS development on AWS Part 1: […]