Amazon Web Services Inc. today announced a new compute service that runs real-time spatial simulations in the cloud at scale.

Called AWS SimSpace Weaver, the new service allows organizations to run simulations that are “rare, dangerous or very expensive to test in the real world.” Described in one report as the ultimate real-life SimCity, SimSpace Weaver allows for worst-case scenario testing, such as what would happen in the event of a natural disaster hitting a town or city.

Ideal for city managers and other government bodies tasked with disaster planning, SimSpace Weaver provides a simulated safe environment to consider the worst case, what could happen and how to respond.

AWS notes that until today, spatial simulations were mostly confined to being run on a single piece of hardware, with limitations when trying to simulate a bigger and more complex world with many independent and dynamic entities. Simulation developers are said to have been forced to make tradeoffs between scale and fidelity, deciding how big the world is and how many independent entities there are.

AWS SimSpace Weaver addresses previous limitations by allowing simulations to run at scale across multiple Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud instances. The service can support simulating upwards of a million independent and dynamic entities.

The new service is also pitched as being ideal for those who need to increase the scale or complexity of their simulations. AWS says SimSpace Weaver is great at simulating crowds, which is useful for planning large events or planning to build infrastructure such as a new stadium. It also says the service is ideal for simulating smart cities, complete with vehicles, inhabitants and other objects.

Users of AWS SimSpace Weaver can parallelize spatial simulations workloads across multiple instances across up to 10 EC2 instances by specifying the compute capacity needed for the simulation. AWS handles the provisioning of the EC2 instances, launches the simulation applications and cleans the environment after the simulation ends.

A notable feature of the service is the scheduler. The SimSpace Weaver scheduler keeps the distributed partitions synchronized at a set simulation tick rate (10, 15 or 30 Hertz), so the simulation behaves as if it was run on one machine.

SimSpace Weaver is available in the US East (Ohio), US East (Northern Virginia), US West (Oregon), Asia-Pacific (Singapore), Asia-Pacific (Sydney), Europe (Ireland), Europe (Frankfurt) and Europe (Stockholm) AWS Regions.

Image: AWS

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