Customer Stories / Media and Entertainment

Create from Anywhere: The Netflix Workstations Story
Netflix is poised to become the world’s most prolific visual effects and animated content studio. To enable its artists around the world, it built Netflix Workstations, a secure way to access remote desktops and stream creative applications from any data center to any device. Artists can now access high-performing virtual workstations on Amazon Web Services (AWS) with the freedom to create no matter where they are. In this re:Invent 2022 session, learn how Netflix used AWS services such as NICE DCV, Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (Amazon EC2) G4 instances, and also the open source continuous delivery platform, Spinnaker, developed by Netflix as its workstation solution. Watch the video to get a glimpse into the future of workstations and how they can be used for a variety of workflows.
AWS Services Used
NICE DCV
NICE DCV is a high-performance remote display protocol that provides customers with a secure way to deliver remote desktops and application streaming from any cloud or data center to any device, over varying network conditions.
Amazon EC2 G4 Instances
Amazon EC2 G4 instances are the industry’s most cost-effective GPU instances for machine learning inference and graphics-intensive applications.
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Explore Netflix's journey of innovation using AWS
More Netflix Stories
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United States
Netflix Empowers Remote Artistry with Low-Latency Workstations Using AWS Local Zones
Netflix deployed its visual effects studio closer to artists using AWS Local Zones, helping it achieve single-digit millisecond latency and keep its remote workstations running smoothly. -
Americas
Netflix & Amazon Kinesis Streams Case Study
Netflix uses AWS to analyze billions of messages across more than 100,000 application instances daily in real time, enabling it to optimize user experience, reduce costs, and improve application resilience. -
United States
Netflix & AWS Lambda Case Study
Netflix is planning to use AWS Lambda to build rule-based self-managing infrastructure and replace inefficient processes to reduce the rate of errors and save valuable time. Watch Neil Hunt, Netflix’s chief product officer, explain how the company can use event-based triggers to help automate the encoding process of media files, the validation of backup completions and instance deployments at scale, and the monitoring of AWS resources used by the organization. -
United States
Untangling multi-account management with ConsoleMe
In this AWS re:Invent 2020 session, explore a Netflix tool, ConsoleMe, developed to address this issue securely, reduce inconsistencies and delays experienced by end users, and lower the multi-account management burden.
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