@QuinnyPig@QuinnyPig I think you are mistaken. It didn't have any inbuilt battery, so it can't operate when it is disconnected from a wall socket. You have to attach an external battery pack with USB-C to power Snowcone.
@DevshiMehrotra Not even a competition. The real race actually begins after you launch the product and unfortunately it never ends. Good luck with everything.
@BrukeGetachew I respectfully disagree my kind sir. Ken's is consistently among the best neopolitan pizzas that I've had. Lovely's is close. I also like Pizzaria Otto which is pretty close to Ken's in flavor. What else is better?
@QuinnyPig lol, atleast you didn't say you want it to look like a Snowcone. :) Making it look like a bucket is easier and may be take it for trick-or-treating.
Regarding the S3 bucket support on Snowcone, it is :construction_worker_emoji:
@john_mason_@awscloud@QuinnyPig It depends on your usecase. Customers have deployed Private 5G cores on AWS Snowcone within the 4GB/ 2 vCPU footprint. IoT Gateway usecases are another example. You are right. Not all edge compute needs can be met by Snowcone. It is not intended to be.
@john_mason_@awscloud@QuinnyPig You are correct. USB-C port is not enabled right now on AWS Snowcone. But we are working on adding that capability to the device.
@john_mason_@awscloud@QuinnyPig The power button cannot be accidentally powered ON during shipment because AWS Snowcone doesn't ship with a power supply. Snowcone is shipped as is with no cables. I'm not sure about your next point. Shipping label on Kindle will automatically flip from customer site to AWS. /1
@gwkennedyiii@kimpall Well I was this excited as well when they announced the Google glasses and then it went nowhere. So, Iβm withholding judgement and expectations at the same time.