
AWS used its June 22 weekly roundup to recap announcements from the AWS Summit in New York, including agent-related updates across Amazon Bedrock AgentCore, AWS Transform, DevOps Agent, Amazon Quick, and AWS Continuum. The company also said xAI’s Grok 4.3 is now available in Amazon Bedrock.
AWS summarized a set of agentic AI announcements in its June 22, 2026 Weekly Roundup, following the AWS Summit in New York.
In the AWS News Blog roundup, AWS highlighted several launches and updates tied to agentic AI, including autonomous Amazon Quick agents, AWS Continuum for AI-native security, DevOps Agent release-management capabilities, AWS Transform modernization features, and Amazon Bedrock AgentCore updates for production agents.
AWS also pointed readers to its separate New York Summit recap, which says Swami Sivasubramanian delivered the keynote and that the event included new AI capabilities across Amazon Bedrock AgentCore, Amazon S3, AWS Transform, AWS WAF, Kiro, and Strands Agents.
The announcements show AWS continuing to package agent-oriented capabilities across multiple parts of its cloud portfolio rather than limiting them to a single developer product. Based on AWS’s own summaries, the focus spans application modernization, security, release management, model orchestration, and developer tooling.
In a separate AWS announcement, the company said xAI’s Grok 4.3 model is now available in Amazon Bedrock. AWS described the model as supporting reasoning, agentic and enterprise workflows, tool calling, structured output, and streaming.
Amazon Bedrock is AWS’s managed service for accessing foundation models and building generative AI applications. The addition of Grok 4.3 expands the model options available to Bedrock customers, according to AWS’s announcement.
AWS’s New York Summit recap identifies Amazon Bedrock AgentCore as one of the areas receiving new agentic AI capabilities. The weekly roundup also names Bedrock AgentCore updates for production agents, indicating that AWS is positioning the service as part of its infrastructure for deploying agents in enterprise settings.
AWS did not provide detailed technical specifications in the supplied roundup excerpt, but the company’s framing emphasizes production use cases. That wording is notable because enterprise agent deployments often require features beyond model access, including tool integration, orchestration, monitoring, and operational controls.
AWS’s roundup also names AWS Transform modernization, DevOps Agent release-management capabilities, and AWS Continuum for AI-native security among the week’s agentic AI-related updates.
Those references suggest AWS is applying agent-based interfaces and automation to existing enterprise workflows. AWS Transform is tied in the source material to modernization. DevOps Agent is described by AWS as adding release-management capabilities. AWS Continuum is described in the roundup as focused on AI-native security.
The same Summit recap also mentions AWS WAF, Kiro, and Strands Agents among the highlighted areas. AWS WAF is the company’s web application firewall service, while Kiro and Strands Agents are listed by AWS as part of the summit’s AI-related announcements.
The June 22 roundup is less a single-product launch than a snapshot of AWS’s broader AI strategy after the New York Summit. Across the cited AWS posts, the company is emphasizing agents as a layer that can interact with enterprise systems, assist developers, support modernization work, and connect to foundation models through Amazon Bedrock.
For customers already using AWS, the most immediate takeaway from the cited announcements is that agentic AI capabilities are being added across familiar cloud services and workflows. For model selection, AWS’s separate notice that Grok 4.3 is available in Amazon Bedrock adds another option for teams building applications that require reasoning, tool calling, structured output, or streaming, according to AWS.
AWS summarized a set of agentic AI announcements in its June 22, 2026 Weekly Roundup, following the AWS Summit in New York.
The announcements show AWS continuing to package agent oriented capabilities across multiple parts of its cloud portfolio rather than limiting them to a single developer product.
Based on AWS’s own summaries, the focus spans application modernization, security, release management, model orchestration, and developer tooling.
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