Debrief: AWS Summit D.C. 2026 — a session on an AI agent for Galaxy administration
Members of the US Galaxy Project team attended the AWS Summit in Washington, D.C. to build relationships that can grow into scientific collaborations and more sustainable open-source infrastructure. A conference session on a third-party AI agent for Galaxy administration was a highlight.
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Why attend? Relationships, collaborations, and sustainability
On 1 July 2026, members of the US Galaxy Project team, based at Johns Hopkins University, attended the AWS Summit in Washington, D.C. The goal was simple and long-term: relationship building → scientific collaborations → sustainable open-source projects. This post debriefs the summit itself and then takes a closer look at one session especially relevant to the Galaxy community — a third-party AI agent designed to improve Galaxy administration.
The through-line of the trip was opportunity mapping. Several kinds of collaboration are within reach between Galaxy and AWS: technical collaborations and conference sponsorships, community and global events, and scientific collaborations — including potential collaborations around AnVIL a secure, cloud-hosted Galaxy. AWS’s catalogue of 200+ managed services also opens the door to collaborate with custom solutions providers for server and platform management.
Why sustaining open source matters even for commercial services
Underlying the “sustainable open-source projects” goal is a point that is easy to overlook: open source constitutes vast economic infrastructure — one whose costs are real, even when they remain invisible. A widely cited Harvard Business School study estimates that firms would need to spend on the order of $8.8 trillion to recreate the open source software they depend on — roughly 3.5× the cost of using what already exists — and that some 96% of commercial software includes open source code. Framed a similar way:
“We find a robustly positive relationship between OSS contributions and entrepreneurial growth.”
— Frank Nagle and colleagues, Harvard Business School
Open source and proprietary software are often cast as rivals, but many industry leaders treat them as complementary — a point that resonates on a trip built around an open-source project serviced by a proprietary cloud provider. NVIDIA’s Jensen Huang, whose company builds proprietary platforms while also ranking among the largest contributors to open-source AI, has put it succiently:
“Proprietary versus open is not a thing. It’s proprietary and open.”
— Jensen Huang, NVIDIA
For a research platform like Galaxy — free to use, community-built, and relied on by labs worldwide, yet increasingly run on and alongside commercial cloud infrastructure — these are not abstract arguments. They are the case for why relationship-building at events like the AWS Summit, and the sponsorships and collaborations that can follow, matter for the project’s long-term health.
The AWS Summit landscape
AWS runs a wide range of event types, and it helps to know how they differ:
- AWS Global Summits — free, regional, 1–2 day events (April–September) with keynotes, hands-on labs, and deep dives tailored to local industries.
- AWS Community Days — local, community-led conferences run by AWS enthusiasts and local leaders.
- AWS Innovate — free half-day webinars focused on major innovations, with live Q&A.
- AWSome Day — a short digital training conference aimed at beginners and IT professionals.
- AWS Public Sector Events — focused on government, education, healthcare, and nonprofits, with an emphasis on mission outcomes and navigating compliance in the cloud.
- AWS re:Invent — the flagship annual conference in Las Vegas.
The Global Summits are worth flagging for community members: they are free to attend — keynotes, breakout sessions, the expo floor, meals, and networking receptions — and simply require registration with an employer email address. With more than 30 summits across the globe in 2026, several land close to Galaxy team-member locations and Tier 2+ instance sites.
Beyond the Washington, D.C. event covered below, the 2026 Global Summit calendar spans six continents — the full schedule of dates and locations is listed in the appendix at the end of this post.
That global spread matters because Galaxy is itself a globally distributed project, and many of the summit cities coincide with this footprint. That overlap is what makes the summits such practical networking opportunities: in a good number of cases, a summit is taking place in a city where Galaxy already has people or infrastructure on the ground, where a community member can represent the project without long-haul travel.
The Washington, D.C. Summit
Held at the Washington Convention Center, the D.C. Summit drew an expected 10,000 attendees, with 100+ exhibitor booths and 350+ sessions. Content ranged from hands-on, bring-your-own-laptop labs — the most useful for practitioners — to more promotional vendor talks, alongside invite-only meetings and networking.
A memorable fact from the expo floor: AWS reports that it has been the largest corporate buyer of renewable energy in the world for six years running. Of AWS’s 200+ services, roughly 16 featured across the GalaxyTrakr summit presentations — spanning compute (EC2, Batch), storage (S3, EFS, ECR), databases (Aurora, RDS), workflow and operations (Step Functions, Systems Manager, CloudWatch), search (OpenSearch), and AI (Bedrock, Nova).
AWS Session spotlight: “Building Self-Healing Platforms to Eliminate Bioinformatic Failures”
The session most relevant to our community described a third-party AI agent for Galaxy administration, presented as a set of agile user stories and built around a GalaxyTrakr-style deployment. (For context, GalaxyTrakr is the US FDA’s public Galaxy instance for food-safety pathogen genomics.)
The challenge it set out to address: administering a Galaxy instance in a high-accuracy, high-throughput setting — food-safety surveillance running at least 2,000 jobs per day — while keeping costs down and making custom tool building and running easier.
Framed as business requirements, constraints, and outcomes, the session reported:
- Requirements: improve administration of the Galaxy instance while decreasing cost; improve the custom-tool building and running process.
- Constraints: a minimum of 2,000 jobs/day; a high-accuracy domain (food-safety surveillance).
- Reported outcomes: roughly $2.8k/month in cost savings; human-in-the-loop AI controls; faster error triage (surfaced every 15 minutes); and much faster container syncing (a reported ~99.7% improvement).
These figures come from the session presenters and describe their own deployment; we share them as an interesting example of where AI-assisted administration and cost optimization are heading, and as a conversation starter for Galaxy admins facing similar operational challenges.
Takeaways for the Galaxy community
The summit was primarily relationship-building groundwork, but a few threads are worth following. There is appetite for technical collaboration and event sponsorship with AWS; scientific collaboration around AnVIL and secure, cloud-hosted Galaxy; and clear shared interest in self-healing administration and cost-efficient operations at scale. Self-managed and institutional Galaxy admins in particular may find the “self-healing platform” framing a useful lens for their own deployments.
Resources
- AWS events overview — aws.amazon.com/events
- AWS renewable energy updates — aboutamazon.com
- On the value of open source: The $9 Trillion Resource Companies Take for Granted (Harvard Business School) — library.hbs.edu
- On open source and competitiveness: Asserting American Leadership in Open Source AI (a16z) — a16z.com
- Jensen Huang on open and proprietary AI: The Future of AI Is Open and Proprietary (NVIDIA) — blogs.nvidia.com
- Jensen Huang on why open source matters (CSIS transcript) — csis.org
Appendix: 2026 AWS Global Summits
The full 2026 AWS Global Summit schedule (excluding the Washington, D.C. event covered above), listed chronologically:
| Date | Location |
|---|---|
| 2026-04-01 | Paris |
| 2026-04-22 | Bengaluru |
| 2026-04-22 | London |
| 2026-05-06 | Singapore |
| 2026-05-06 | Warsaw |
| 2026-05-07 | Stockholm |
| 2026-05-13 | Sydney |
| 2026-05-20 | Hamburg |
| 2026-05-20 | Seoul |
| 2026-05-27 | Amsterdam |
| 2026-05-28 | Mumbai |
| 2026-05-28 | Bangkok |
| 2026-05-28 | Milano |
| 2026-06-03 | Toronto |
| 2026-06-04 | Madrid |
| 2026-06-10 | Los Angeles |
| 2026-06-17 | New York City |
| 2026-06-17 | Hong Kong |
| 2026-06-23 | Shanghai |
| 2026-06-25 | Japan |
| 2026-07-15 | Taipei |
| 2026-07-30 | Bogotá |
| 2026-08-06 | Jakarta |
| 2026-08-12 | Ciudad de México |
| 2026-08-19 | Johannesburg |
| 2026-09-02 | Zurich |
| 2026-09-03 | São Paulo |
| 2026-09-10 | Tel Aviv |
| 2026-09-30 | Dubai |