Meet VyOS at Booth 450 to standardize routing, firewalling, and VPN across AWS, hybrid cloud, edge, and bare metal environments with full operational control and zero vendor lock-in.
POWAY, Calif., June 3, 2026 – VyOS Networks announced its participation in AWS Summit Los Angeles 2026, where the company will showcase how organizations can build high-performance, automation-ready networking infrastructure across cloud and hybrid environments while maintaining ownership, transparency, and operational control.
At Booth 450, VyOS will meet with cloud architects, platform engineering teams, managed service providers, and infrastructure leaders exploring alternatives to proprietary networking stacks. Discussions will focus on how organizations can establish a consistent networking foundation across AWS, private infrastructure, and edge environments without sacrificing performance, flexibility, or governance.
As cloud adoption continues to accelerate, infrastructure teams are under pressure to simplify operations, standardize deployments, and maintain visibility across increasingly distributed environments. At the same time, many organizations face growing concerns around vendor dependency, unpredictable licensing models, and fragmented operational workflows. VyOS addresses these challenges through a universal network operating system that delivers advanced routing, firewalling, VPN, and network services across cloud, virtualized, and bare metal deployments using a single operational model.
Topics the VyOS team will discuss at AWS Summit Los Angeles include:
“Organizations want the flexibility of cloud without losing control of their networking layer,” said Yuriy Andamasov, CEO of VyOS Networks. “At AWS Summit Los Angeles, we're demonstrating how teams can combine high-performance networking, infrastructure sovereignty, and automation-ready operations within a single platform that works consistently across cloud, edge, and on-premises environments.”
Visit VyOS at Booth 450 during AWS Summit Los Angeles 2026 to learn how a universal network operating system can help simplify infrastructure operations while preserving the control, transparency, and flexibility modern organizations require.
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