The University of Bath in southwest England wanted to make better use of data to support decision making across the campus. It decided to build a system that used Wi-Fi and Internet of Things (IoT) data to better understand the occupancy of its teaching spaces. It wanted to make the data available in near real-time and in visual form to give it insights into estate management, building projects, and timetable strategy. The university turned to AWS Partner BJSS to help build the system on Amazon Web Services (AWS). The project proved that the university could accurately assess use of spaces in near real-time using anonymized, cleansed, and processed Wi-Fi data.
Likezero is a UK-based agreement intelligence software company, spun out of professional services company PwC. Its legal agreement application previously ran on PwC’s private network, and is also hosted by two major partners—the London Stock Exchange and S&P Global. Likezero needed a new cloud-based solution after the company became independent from PwC, so it turned to AWS Partner Eviden to help it run its service for customers on Amazon Web Services (AWS). Eviden developed a highly scalable system for Likezero on AWS in 2 months.
Holcim, a global leader in innovative and sustainable building solutions, wanted to reduce concrete delivery times to minimize wastage in line with its focus on sustainability. It engaged AWS Partner HERE Technologies to support time-sensitive deliveries with real-time smart navigation built on robust location services.
Using HERE solutions on Amazon Web Services (AWS), Holcim has benefited from global availability and resilience, saving over 800,000 hours across 200,000 job sites and delivering 6.4 million loads of concrete on time.
NeuralSpace, a London-based AI startup, had the same problem that many startups have: not enough time, not enough money, and too much to do. It needed to develop and train the AI models that powered its language AI applications—automatic translation of text and speech, automated subtitling, and automated AI dubbing of content—but these processes were taking too long. With 20–30 TB of data being used to train each model, it could take 3–6 months to train just one. And the company needed to train multiple models to develop its products. NeuralSpace knew that it needed to find a way to speed up model training that would fit within its limited budget. With the help of AWS Partner Rebura, NeuralSpace migrated to Amazon Web Services (AWS) to enable faster modeling and a crucial pivot in focus.
Baptist Memorial Health Care (BMHC) needed a more resilient disaster recovery posture to ensure uninterrupted care to 3 million patients in three states across the mid-South. Facing challenges with its on-premises data center, including limited scalability, high maintenance costs, and the risk of outages, BMHC partnered with AWS Partner Optimum Healthcare IT to migrate the health system’s full electronic health records system to AWS. The move resulted in enhanced disaster recovery capabilities, a 20% improvement in system performance, and lower total cost of ownership—all of which enhance the organization’s ability to deliver high-quality healthcare services across 22 hospitals and more than 200 clinics.