The 3 Most Disruptive Accomplishments Inside Amazon's Earnings Report

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Amazon (NASDAQ: AMZN) shareholders have had quite a lot to smile about over the past few years, and the company's most recent earnings release was no exception. If you've never read an Amazon quarterly press release before, it can seem like a novella, as Amazon operates in just about every industry on the planet (it is "The Everything Store" after all) and adopts a rapid pace of innovation.

Here were the most noteworthy achievements from Amazon's busy fourth quarter.

Wavy lines of ones and zeroes signifying artificial intelligence.
Wavy lines of ones and zeroes signifying artificial intelligence.

Image source: Getty Images.

1. A future bundle?

Many may not have noticed a tidbit regarding Amazon's new partnership with CBS (NYSE: CBS) All Access, which will be added to the Amazon Channels lineup. Amazon Channels allows Prime customers to buy on-demand streaming services from most premium video suppliers, like Starz, HBO, and Showtime. Of course, Amazon also has its own Prime Video service, and it just acquired the rights to The Lord of the Rings for an upcoming prequel series.

However, this CBS deal actually marks the first live linear broadcast feed in Prime Video. In addition, Amazon had Thursday Night Football live-streaming for the first time as well last quarter. Major competitors like Alphabet and AT&T already offer skinny, over-the-top bundles with linear channels, so the new CBS deal could potentially mark Amazon's entry into the skinny-bundle race. Since Prime and Alexa are becoming more and more embedded in customers' homes, it only makes sense that Amazon should be able to "bundle a bundle" along with Prime at some point.

On that note, the company also reported that the Fire TV Stick was among the best-selling products across all of Amazon last year.

2. AI as a service

Amazon Web Services (AWS) posted another strong quarter with growth accelerating 45%. And just as AWS revolutionized outsourcing of corporate IT infrastructure, Amazon is now looking to do the same with artificial intelligence (AI) via a new service called SageMaker, which was just announced at the company's November re:Invent conference.

Amazon had offered customers machine-learning tools since 2015, but SageMaker is a much more comprehensive, sophisticated system of ready-to-use, "one click" AI algorithms that don't require a Ph.D. According to the press release:

SageMaker makes model building and training easier by providing pre-built development notebooks; popular machine-learning algorithms optimized for petabyte-scale data sets; and automatic model tuning, enabling developers to build, train, and deploy models in a single click. Since its launch two months ago, Amazon SageMaker is already helping thousands of developers to easily get started and become competent in building, training, and deploying models.