AWS opens Amazon Quick to free signups and brings GPT-5.5, Codex to Bedrock
Original: Top announcements of the What’s Next with AWS, 2026 View original →
AWS used its April 28 launch bundle to make a broader point than any single product page could. The company is no longer content to be seen mainly as the place where other people run models. In its What’s Next with AWS 2026 recap, AWS introduced an end-user work assistant, expanded purpose-built agentic products for business functions, and pulled OpenAI’s frontier model stack deeper into Amazon Bedrock. The strategy is to compress assistant, workflow, and model access into one operating surface.
Amazon Quick is the clearest example of that shift. AWS said users can now sign up for Free and Plus plans in minutes using a personal email address or existing Google, Apple, Github, or Amazon credentials, with no AWS account required. A separate AWS note said the guided onboarding can surface value in less than five minutes. The desktop app preview adds access to local files, calendar, and communications, which pushes Quick closer to a real day-to-day work layer instead of a browser-only demo.
The platform-side moves are just as important. Amazon Connect is expanding into four agentic AI solutions: Decisions for supply chains, Talent for hiring, Customer for customer experience, and Health for healthcare workflows. At the same time, AWS said Amazon Bedrock will get limited preview access to GPT-5.5 and GPT-5.4, Codex on Amazon Bedrock, and Amazon Bedrock Managed Agents powered by OpenAI. The selling point is not only model availability. AWS is emphasizing that customers can use the same Bedrock APIs, security controls, governance, and cost management they already use elsewhere on the platform.
This is a more opinionated AWS than the old “bring your own model” posture. The company is trying to erase the line between assistant app, agent runtime, and model host, while making the whole package easier for enterprises to buy. That convenience also raises the usual platform question: how much of the AI stack a customer wants to hand to one vendor. Even so, the direction is unmistakable. AWS is moving up the stack, from infrastructure landlord to a company that wants to shape how agentic work is packaged and run.
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