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AWS Weekly Roundup: Amazon S3 turns 20, Amazon Route 53 Global Resolver general availability, and more (March 16, 2026) Twenty years ago this past week, Amazon S3 launched publicly on March 14, 2006. While Amazon Simple Storage Service is often considered the foundational storage service that defined cloud infrastructure, what began as a simple object storage service has grown into something far larger in scope and scale. As of March 2026, S3 stores more […]

AWS Weekly Roundup: Amazon S3 turns 20, Amazon Route 53 Global Resolver general availability, and more (March 16, 2026)

Twenty years ago this past w...

#AWS #AmazonBedrockAgentcore #AmazonRedshift #AmazonRoute53 #AmazonSimpleStorageService(S3) #AmazonWorkspaces #Announcements #News #WeekInReview

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Amazon Redshift introduces new array functions for semi-structured data processing Amazon Redshift now supports nine new array functions for working with semi-structured data stored in the SUPER data type. The new functions include ARRAY_CONTAINS, ARRAY_DISTINCT, ARRAY_EXCEPT, ARRAY_INTERSECTION, ARRAY_POSITION, ARRAY_POSITIONS, ARRAY_SORT, ARRAY_UNION, and ARRAYS_OVERLAP, enabling you to search, compare, sort, and transform arrays directly within your SQL queries. Previously, performing these operations required writing complex custom PartiQL SQL logic. These functions simplify complex data transformations and reduce query complexity by enabling sophisticated array operations in a single SQL statement. For example, you can use ARRAY_CONTAINS and ARRAY_POSITION for element lookup, ARRAY_INTERSECTION and ARRAY_EXCEPT for set operations, or ARRAY_SORT and ARRAY_DISTINCT to organize and deduplicate data. These functions are particularly valuable for applications involving nested data structures, event processing, and analytics workflows where data needs to be aggregated, filtered, or transformed at scale. The new Amazon Redshift array functions are available in all AWS Regions, including the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions, where Amazon Redshift is available. To learn more, please visit our documentation.

🆕 Amazon Redshift adds nine new array functions for SUPER data type, simplifying semi-structured data processing with operations like ARRAY_CONTAINS, ARRAY_SORT, and ARRAY_UNION, reducing complex custom SQL logic and enhancing data transformation in SQL queries.

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift introduces reusable templates for COPY operations Amazon Redshift now supports templates for the COPY command, allowing you to store and reuse frequently used COPY parameters. This new feature enables you to create reusable templates that contain commonly utilized formatting parameters, eliminating the need to manually specify parameters for each COPY operation. Templates help maintain consistency across data ingestion operations that use the COPY command. They also reduce the time and effort required to execute COPY commands. You can create standardized configurations for different file types and data sources, ensuring consistent parameter usage across your teams and reducing the likelihood of errors caused by manual input. When parameters need to be updated, changes to the template automatically apply to all future uses, simplifying maintenance and improving operational efficiency. Support for templates for the COPY command is available in all AWS Regions, including the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions, where Amazon Redshift is available. To get started with templates, see the documentation or check out the AWS Blog.

🆕 Amazon Redshift now offers reusable templates for COPY operations, allowing users to store and reuse common parameters, ensuring consistency, reducing manual input, and simplifying maintenance across all AWS Regions.

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift introduces new array functions for semi-structured data processing https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/ now supports nine new array functions for working with semi-structured data stored in the https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/super-overview.html data type. The new functions include ARRAY_CONTAINS, ARRAY_DISTINCT, ARRAY_EXCEPT, ARRAY_INTERSECTION, ARRAY_POSITION, ARRAY_POSITIONS, ARRAY_SORT, ARRAY_UNION, and ARRAYS_OVERLAP, enabling you to search, compare, sort, and transform arrays directly within your SQL queries. Previously, performing these operations required writing complex custom PartiQL SQL logic. These functions simplify complex data transformations and reduce query complexity by enabling sophisticated array operations in a single SQL statement. For example, you can use ARRAY_CONTAINS and ARRAY_POSITION for element lookup, ARRAY_INTERSECTION and ARRAY_EXCEPT for set operations, or ARRAY_SORT and ARRAY_DISTINCT to organize and deduplicate data. These functions are particularly valuable for applications involving nested data structures, event processing, and analytics workflows where data needs to be aggregated, filtered, or transformed at scale. The new Amazon Redshift array functions are available in all AWS Regions, including the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions, where Amazon Redshift is available. To learn more, please visit our https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/c_Array_Functions.html.

Amazon Redshift introduces new array functions for semi-structured data processing

https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/ now supports nine new array functions for working with semi-structured data stored in the docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/super...

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift introduces reusable templates for COPY operations https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/ now supports templates for the COPY command, allowing you to store and reuse frequently used https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/r_COPY-parameters.html. This new feature enables you to create reusable templates that contain commonly utilized formatting parameters, eliminating the need to manually specify parameters for each COPY operation. Templates help maintain consistency across data ingestion operations that use the COPY command. They also reduce the time and effort required to execute COPY commands. You can create standardized configurations for different file types and data sources, ensuring consistent parameter usage across your teams and reducing the likelihood of errors caused by manual input. When parameters need to be updated, changes to the template automatically apply to all future uses, simplifying maintenance and improving operational efficiency. Support for templates for the COPY command is available in all AWS Regions, including the AWS GovCloud (US) Regions, where Amazon Redshift is available. To get started with https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/r_COPY-WITH-TEMPLATE.html, see the documentation or check out the https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/big-data/standardize-amazon-redshift-operations-using-templates/.

Amazon Redshift introduces reusable templates for COPY operations

https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/ now supports templates for the COPY command, allowing you to store and reuse frequently used docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/r_COP... This new ...

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift Serverless now maintains datashare permissions during restore Amazon Redshift Serverless now preserves datashare permissions when you restore a snapshot to the same namespace, simplifying data sharing workflows and reducing administrative overhead. Previously, restoring a serverless namespace from a snapshot required administrators to manually re-grant datashare permissions to consumer clusters and recreate consumer databases, even when restoring to the same namespace. With this enhancement, datashare permissions are automatically maintained when you restore a snapshot to the same producer namespace, provided the datashare permission existed both when the snapshot was taken and on the current namespace. For consumer namespaces, datashare access remains unchanged after restore, eliminating the need for producer administrators to re-grant permissions. This streamlines disaster recovery and testing workflows by reducing manual configuration steps and potential errors. Amazon Redshift also provides EventBridge notifications to alert you when datashares are dropped, consumer access is revoked, or public accessibility changes during restore operations. This feature is available in all AWS Regions that support Amazon Redshift. To learn more, see the Amazon Redshift Management Guide.

🆕 Amazon Redshift Serverless preserves datashare permissions during restores, simplifying workflows and cutting admin tasks. It maintains permissions when restoring snapshots within the same namespace, eliminating manual re-granting, and is available in all AWS Regions suppor…

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift Serverless now maintains datashare permissions during restore Amazon Redshift Serverless now preserves datashare permissions when you restore a snapshot to the same namespace, simplifying data sharing workflows and reducing administrative overhead. Previously, restoring a serverless namespace from a snapshot required administrators to manually re-grant datashare permissions to consumer clusters and recreate consumer databases, even when restoring to the same namespace. With this enhancement, datashare permissions are automatically maintained when you restore a snapshot to the same producer namespace, provided the datashare permission existed both when the snapshot was taken and on the current namespace. For consumer namespaces, datashare access remains unchanged after restore, eliminating the need for producer administrators to re-grant permissions. This streamlines disaster recovery and testing workflows by reducing manual configuration steps and potential errors. Amazon Redshift also provides EventBridge notifications to alert you when datashares are dropped, consumer access is revoked, or public accessibility changes during restore operations. This feature is available in all AWS Regions that support https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/. To learn more, see the https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/mgmt/welcome.html.

Amazon Redshift Serverless now maintains datashare permissions during restore

Amazon Redshift Serverless now preserves datashare permissions when you restore a snapshot to the same namespace, simplifying data sharing workflows and reducing administrative overhead. Previou...

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift Serverless introduces 3-year Serverless Reservations Amazon Redshift now offers 3-year Serverless Reservations for Amazon Redshift Serverless, a new discounted pricing option that provides up to 45% savings and improved cost predictability for your analytics workloads. With Serverless Reservations, you commit to a specific number of Redshift Processing Units (RPUs) for a 3-year term with a no-upfront payment option. Amazon Redshift Serverless allows you to run and scale analytics without having to provision and manage clusters with a pay-as-you-go pricing model. Serverless Reservations help you further optimize compute costs and improve cost predictability of existing and new workloads on Amazon Redshift Serverless. Managed at the AWS payer account level, Serverless Reservations can be shared between multiple AWS accounts, reducing your compute costs by up to 45% on all Amazon Redshift Serverless workloads in your AWS account. Serverless Reservations are billed hourly and metered per second, offering a consistent billing model (24 hours a day, seven days a week) while maintaining the flexibility offered by Amazon Redshift Serverless. Any usage exceeding the specified RPU level is charged at standard on-demand rates. You can purchase Serverless Reservations via the Amazon Redshift console or by invoking the Serverless Reservations API “create-reservation”. Serverless Reservations are available in all regions where Amazon Redshift Serverless is currently available. To learn more about Amazon Redshift Serverless pricing options, see the Redshift Serverless feature page, Redshift Pricing Page, or the Amazon Redshift Management Guide.

🆕 Amazon Redshift Serverless now offers 3-year Serverless Reservations for up to 45% savings, no upfront, shared across accounts, billed hourly, and available in all regions where Redshift Serverless operates.

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift Serverless introduces 3-year Serverless Reservations Amazon Redshift now offers 3-year Serverless Reservations for Amazon Redshift Serverless, a new discounted pricing option that provides up to 45% savings and improved cost predictability for your analytics workloads. With Serverless Reservations, you commit to a specific number of Redshift Processing Units (RPUs) for a 3-year term with a no-upfront payment option. Amazon Redshift Serverless allows you to run and scale analytics without having to provision and manage clusters with a pay-as-you-go pricing model. Serverless Reservations help you further optimize compute costs and improve cost predictability of existing and new workloads on Amazon Redshift Serverless. Managed at the AWS payer account level, Serverless Reservations can be shared between multiple AWS accounts, reducing your compute costs by up to 45% on all Amazon Redshift Serverless workloads in your AWS account. Serverless Reservations are billed hourly and metered per second, offering a consistent billing model (24 hours a day, seven days a week) while maintaining the flexibility offered by Amazon Redshift Serverless. Any usage exceeding the specified RPU level is charged at standard on-demand rates. You can purchase Serverless Reservations via the Amazon Redshift console or by invoking the Serverless Reservations API “create-reservation”. Serverless Reservations are available in all regions where Amazon Redshift Serverless is currently available. To learn more about Amazon Redshift Serverless pricing options, see the https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/redshift-serverless/, https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/pricing/, or the https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/mgmt/serverless-billing-reserved.html. 

Amazon Redshift Serverless introduces 3-year Serverless Reservations

Amazon Redshift now offers 3-year Serverless Reservations for Amazon Redshift Serverless, a new discounted pricing option that provides up to 45% savings and improved cost predictability for your analyti...

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift now supports allocating extra compute for automatic optimizations Amazon Redshift now supports allocating extra compute for automatic optimization features, known as autonomics. Database administrators managing Amazon Redshift workloads can now allocate additional resources for their clusters to enable autonomics even during periods of high user activity, eliminating the need to manually schedule optimizations such as Automatic Table Optimization (ATO), Automatic Table Sorting (ATS), Auto Vacuum, and Auto Analyze. This enhancement extends Amazon Redshift's autonomics capabilities to automatically leverage extra compute resources, to run reliably without impacting user workloads. It also includes a cost control feature for provisioned clusters, allowing database administrators to limit the amount of resources available to autonomics. Additionally, the new SYS_AUTOMATIC_OPTIMIZATION system table enhances observability by providing detailed information on autonomics operations for both provisioned clusters and serverless workgroups. This feature is available in all https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/global-infrastructure/regional-product-services/ where https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/ is supported. To learn more, see https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/t_extra-compute-autonomics.html.

Amazon Redshift now supports allocating extra compute for automatic optimizations

Amazon Redshift now supports allocating extra compute for automatic optimization features, known as autonomics. Database administrators managing Amazon Redshift workloads can now allocate ad...

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift now supports allocating extra compute for automatic optimizations Amazon Redshift now supports allocating extra compute for automatic optimization features, known as autonomics. Database administrators managing Amazon Redshift workloads can now allocate additional resources for their clusters to enable autonomics even during periods of high user activity, eliminating the need to manually schedule optimizations such as Automatic Table Optimization (ATO), Automatic Table Sorting (ATS), Auto Vacuum, and Auto Analyze. This enhancement extends Amazon Redshift's autonomics capabilities to automatically leverage extra compute resources, to run reliably without impacting user workloads. It also includes a cost control feature for provisioned clusters, allowing database administrators to limit the amount of resources available to autonomics. Additionally, the new SYS_AUTOMATIC_OPTIMIZATION system table enhances observability by providing detailed information on autonomics operations for both provisioned clusters and serverless workgroups. This feature is available in all AWS Regions where Amazon Redshift is supported. To learn more, see Allocating extra compute resources for automatic database optimization.

🆕 Amazon Redshift now offers extra compute for automatic optimizations, enabling autonomics during high activity without manual scheduling. It includes cost control and observability via the SYS_AUTOMATIC_OPTIMIZATION table. Available in all AWS Regions.

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift now supports autonomics for multi-cluster environments Amazon Redshift now supports autonomics—automatic optimization features—for multi-cluster environments. Database administrators managing distributed Amazon Redshift workloads can now benefit from autonomics that work intelligently across multiple warehouses, eliminating manual performance tuning across consumer clusters. This launch extends Amazon Redshift's autonomics capabilities, including Automatic Table Optimization (ATO), Automatic Table Sorting (ATS), Auto Vacuum, and Auto Analyze, to consider query patterns from all consumer clusters when managing table layouts and maintenance operations. Organizations where multiple business units access shared data can benefit from holistic optimization that considers all workload patterns, reducing manual optimization processes. This launch also includes a denylist feature, allowing you to exclude specific endpoints or AWS accounts from influencing optimization decisions—particularly useful for cross-organizational data sharing scenarios. These enhanced autonomics features are available at no additional cost for Amazon Redshift customers. This feature is available in all https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/global-infrastructure/regional-product-services/ that support https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/. To learn more, see the https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/mgmt/welcome.html.

Amazon Redshift now supports autonomics for multi-cluster environments

Amazon Redshift now supports autonomics—automatic optimization features—for multi-cluster environments. Database administrators managing distributed Amazon Redshift workloads can now benefit from a...

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon S3 Storage Lens adds performance metrics, support for billions of prefixes, and export to S3 Tables New capabilities help optimize application performance, analyze unlimited prefixes, and simplify metrics analysis through S3 Tables integration.

Amazon S3 Storage Lens adds performance metrics, support for billions of prefixes, and export to S3 Tables

New capabilities help optimize appli...

#AWS #AmazonAthena #AmazonCloudwatch #AmazonEmr #AmazonQuickSight #AmazonRedshift #AmazonS3Tables #AmazonSimpleStorageService(S3) #Analytics #Storage

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Zero-ETL for self-managed Database Sources now available in 7 new regions https://docs.aws.amazon.com/glue/latest/dg/zero-etl-using.html now supports zero-ETL for self-managed database sources in seven additional regions. Using Glue zero-ETL, you can setup an integration to replicate data from Oracle, SQL Server, MySQL or PostgreSQL databases which are located on-premises or on AWS EC2 to Redshift with a simple experience that eliminates configuration complexity. AWS zero-ETL for self-managed database sources will automatically create an integration for an on-going replication of data from your on-premises or EC2 databases through a simple, no-code interface. You can now replicate data from Oracle, SQL Server, MySQL and PostgreSQL databases into Redshift. This feature further reduces users' operational burden and saves weeks of engineering effort needed to design, build, and test data pipelines to ingest data from self-managed databases to Redshift. AWS Glue zero-ETL for self-managed database sources are available in the following additional AWS Regions: Asia Pacific (Hong Kong), Asia Pacific (Tokyo), Asia Pacific (Singapore), Asia Pacific (Sydney), Europe (London), South America (São Paulo), and US (Virginia) regions. To get started, sign into the https://us-east-1.console.aws.amazon.com/ec2/home?region=us-east-1#LaunchInstances:instanceType=r8a.large. For more information visit the https://aws.amazon.com/glue/ or review the https://docs.aws.amazon.com/glue/latest/dg/zero-etl-using.html documentation.

Zero-ETL for self-managed Database Sources now available in 7 new regions

docs.aws.amazon.com/glue/latest/dg/zero-etl-... now supports zero-ETL for self-managed database sources in seven additional regions. Using Glue z...

#AWS #AwsDatabaseMigrationService #AmazonRedshift #AwsGlue

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Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x Driver now supports Apple macOS https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/ ODBC 2.x driver now supports Apple macOS, expanding platform compatibility for developers and analysts. This enhancement allows Apple macOS users to connect to Amazon Redshift clusters using the latest Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x driver version. You can use an ODBC connection to connect to your Amazon Redshift cluster from many third-party SQL client tools and applications. The Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x native driver support enables you to access Amazon Redshift features such as https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/getting-started-datashare-writes.html capabilities and https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/mgmt/redshift-iam-access-control-idp-connect.html - features that are only available through Amazon Redshift drivers. This native Apple macOS support enables seamless integration with Extract, Transform, Load (ETL) and Business Intelligence (BI) tools, allowing you to use Apple macOS while accessing the full suite of Amazon Redshift capabilities. We recommend that you upgrade to the latest Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x driver version to access new features. For installation instructions and system requirements, please see the Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x driver https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/mgmt/odbc20-install-config-mac.html.

Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x Driver now supports Apple macOS

https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/ ODBC 2.x driver now supports Apple macOS, expanding platform compatibility for developers and analysts. This enhancement allows Apple macOS users to connect to Amazon Redshift cluste...

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift Serverless adds queue-based query resource management Amazon Redshift Serverless introduces queue-based query resource management. You can create dedicated query queues with customized monitoring rules for different workloads. This feature provides granular control over resource usage. Queues let you set metrics-based predicates and automated responses. For example, you can configure rules to automatically abort queries that exceed time limits or consume too many resources. Previously, Query Monitoring Rules (QMR) were applied only at the Redshift Serverless workgroup level, affecting all queries run in this workgroup uniformly. The new queue-based approach lets you create queues with distinct monitoring rules. You can assign these queues to specific user roles and query groups. Each queue operates independently, with rules affecting only the queries within that queue. The available monitoring metrics can be found in https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/cm-c-wlm-query-monitoring-rules.html#cm-c-wlm-query-monitoring-metrics-serverless. This feature is available in all https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/global-infrastructure/regional-product-services/ that support Amazon Redshift Serverless. You can manage QMR with queues through the AWS Console and Redshift APIs. For implementation details, see the https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/mgmt/serverless-workgroup-query-limits.html in the Amazon Redshift management guide.

Amazon Redshift Serverless adds queue-based query resource management

Amazon Redshift Serverless introduces queue-based query resource management. You can create dedicated query queues with customized monitoring rules for different workloads. This feature provides granula...

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift Serverless adds queue-based query resource management Amazon Redshift Serverless introduces queue-based query resource management. You can create dedicated query queues with customized monitoring rules for different workloads. This feature provides granular control over resource usage. Queues let you set metrics-based predicates and automated responses. For example, you can configure rules to automatically abort queries that exceed time limits or consume too many resources. Previously, Query Monitoring Rules (QMR) were applied only at the Redshift Serverless workgroup level, affecting all queries run in this workgroup uniformly. The new queue-based approach lets you create queues with distinct monitoring rules. You can assign these queues to specific user roles and query groups. Each queue operates independently, with rules affecting only the queries within that queue. The available monitoring metrics can be found in Query monitoring metrics for Amazon Redshift Serverless. This feature is available in all AWS regions that support Amazon Redshift Serverless. You can manage QMR with queues through the AWS Console and Redshift APIs. For implementation details, see the documentation in the Amazon Redshift management guide.

🆕 Amazon Redshift Serverless adds queue-based query resource management with dedicated queues and custom monitoring for varied workloads. This offers fine-tuned control over resource use and automated responses for metrics, available in all Redshift Serverless regions.

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift Serverless is now available in the AWS Asia Pacific (New Zealand) region https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/redshift-serverless/, which allows you to run and scale analytics without having to provision and manage data warehouse clusters, is now generally available in the AWS Asia Pacific (New Zealand) region. With Amazon Redshift Serverless, all users, including data analysts, developers, and data scientists, can use Amazon Redshift to get insights from data in seconds. Amazon Redshift Serverless automatically provisions and intelligently scales data warehouse capacity to deliver high performance for all your analytics. You only pay for the compute used for the duration of the workloads on a per-second basis. You can benefit from this simplicity without making any changes to your existing analytics and business intelligence applications. With a few clicks in the AWS Management Console, you can get started with querying data using the Query Editor V2 or your tool of choice with Amazon Redshift Serverless. There is no need to choose node types, node count, workload management, scaling, and other manual configurations. You can create databases, schemas, and tables, and load your own data from Amazon S3, access data using Amazon Redshift data shares, or restore an existing Amazon Redshift provisioned cluster snapshot. With Amazon Redshift Serverless, you can directly query data in open formats, such as Apache Parquet, Apache Iceberg in Amazon S3 data lakes. Amazon Redshift Serverless provides unified billing for queries on any of these data sources, helping you efficiently monitor and manage costs. To get started, see the Amazon Redshift Serverless https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/redshift-serverless/, https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/mgmt/working-with-serverless.html, and https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift-serverless/latest/APIReference/Welcome.html.

Amazon Redshift Serverless is now available in the AWS Asia Pacific (New Zealand) region

https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/redshift-serverless/ which allows you to run and scale analytics without having to provision and manage data warehouse clusters, is now generally avai...

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift Serverless is now available in the AWS Asia Pacific (New Zealand) region Amazon Redshift Serverless, which allows you to run and scale analytics without having to provision and manage data warehouse clusters, is now generally available in the AWS Asia Pacific (New Zealand) region. With Amazon Redshift Serverless, all users, including data analysts, developers, and data scientists, can use Amazon Redshift to get insights from data in seconds. Amazon Redshift Serverless automatically provisions and intelligently scales data warehouse capacity to deliver high performance for all your analytics. You only pay for the compute used for the duration of the workloads on a per-second basis. You can benefit from this simplicity without making any changes to your existing analytics and business intelligence applications. With a few clicks in the AWS Management Console, you can get started with querying data using the Query Editor V2 or your tool of choice with Amazon Redshift Serverless. There is no need to choose node types, node count, workload management, scaling, and other manual configurations. You can create databases, schemas, and tables, and load your own data from Amazon S3, access data using Amazon Redshift data shares, or restore an existing Amazon Redshift provisioned cluster snapshot. With Amazon Redshift Serverless, you can directly query data in open formats, such as Apache Parquet, Apache Iceberg in Amazon S3 data lakes. Amazon Redshift Serverless provides unified billing for queries on any of these data sources, helping you efficiently monitor and manage costs. To get started, see the Amazon Redshift Serverless feature page, user documentation, and API Reference.

🆕 Amazon Redshift Serverless is now live in AWS Asia Pacific (New Zealand). It lets users run analytics without managing clusters. Pay per second, enjoy automatic scaling, and get insights quickly. Start easily via the AWS Management Console.

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon S3 Storage Lens adds performance metrics, support for billions of prefixes, and export to S3 Tables New capabilities help optimize application performance, analyze unlimited prefixes, and simplify metrics analysis through S3 Tables integration.

Amazon S3 Storage Lens adds performance metrics, support for billions of prefixes, and export to S3 Tables

New capabilities help optimize appli...

#AWS #AmazonAthena #AmazonCloudwatch #AmazonEmr #AmazonQuickSight #AmazonRedshift #AmazonS3Tables #AmazonSimpleStorageService(S3) #Analytics #Storage

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Amazon Redshift supports four new materialized view (MV) features on data shares https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/ now allows you to run create MV and refresh MV commands from multiple Amazon Redshift data warehouses. This update also allows you to create an MV on shared MVs. Finally, this release now supports concurrency scaling of the create materialized view (MV) data definition language (DDL) command. With this update, you can now scale the create MV DDL command whenever your main Amazon Redshift data warehouse cluster or workgroup runs out of resources simply by enabling concurrency scaling in your Amazon Redshift account. You can start using these new capabilities immediately in all AWS regions where Amazon Redshift is available to scale your workload and build resilient analytics applications with predictable Service Level Agreements. To get started, refer to the https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/concurrency-scaling.html, https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/materialized-view-overview.html and https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/datashare-overview.html sections of the Amazon Redshifthttps://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/materialized-view-overview.html.

Amazon Redshift supports four new materialized view (MV) features on data shares

https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/ now allows you to run create MV and refresh MV commands from multiple Amazon Redshift data warehouses. This update also allows you to create an MV on shared M...

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift supports four new materialized view (MV) features on data shares Amazon Redshift now allows you to run create MV and refresh MV commands from multiple Amazon Redshift data warehouses. This update also allows you to create an MV on shared MVs. Finally, this release now supports concurrency scaling of the create materialized view (MV) data definition language (DDL) command. With this update, you can now scale the create MV DDL command whenever your main Amazon Redshift data warehouse cluster or workgroup runs out of resources simply by enabling concurrency scaling in your Amazon Redshift account. You can start using these new capabilities immediately in all AWS regions where Amazon Redshift is available to scale your workload and build resilient analytics applications with predictable Service Level Agreements. To get started, refer to the Concurrency Scaling, Materialized Views and Data Sharing sections of the Amazon Redshift documentation.

🆕 Amazon Redshift introduces four new materialized view features for data shares, including create and refresh MV commands across warehouses, shared MV creation, and concurrency scaling for create MV DDL commands. Use these features in all AWS regions to build resilient analy…

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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#AmazonRedshift #Amazon #AWS

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Zero-ETL for self-managed Database Sources now available in 7 new regions https://docs.aws.amazon.com/glue/latest/dg/zero-etl-using.html now supports zero-ETL for self-managed database sources in seven additional regions. Using Glue zero-ETL, you can setup an integration to replicate data from Oracle, SQL Server, MySQL or PostgreSQL databases which are located on-premises or on AWS EC2 to Redshift with a simple experience that eliminates configuration complexity. AWS zero-ETL for self-managed database sources will automatically create an integration for an on-going replication of data from your on-premises or EC2 databases through a simple, no-code interface. You can now replicate data from Oracle, SQL Server, MySQL and PostgreSQL databases into Redshift. This feature further reduces users' operational burden and saves weeks of engineering effort needed to design, build, and test data pipelines to ingest data from self-managed databases to Redshift. AWS Glue zero-ETL for self-managed database sources are available in the following additional AWS Regions: Asia Pacific (Hong Kong), Asia Pacific (Tokyo), Asia Pacific (Singapore), Asia Pacific (Sydney), Europe (London), South America (São Paulo), and US (Virginia) regions. To get started, sign into the https://us-east-1.console.aws.amazon.com/ec2/home?region=us-east-1#LaunchInstances:instanceType=r8a.large. For more information visit the https://aws.amazon.com/glue/ or review the https://docs.aws.amazon.com/glue/latest/dg/zero-etl-using.html documentation.

Zero-ETL for self-managed Database Sources now available in 7 new regions

docs.aws.amazon.com/glue/latest/dg/zero-etl-... now supports zero-ETL for self-managed database sources in seven additional regions. Using Glue z...

#AWS #AwsDatabaseMigrationService #AmazonRedshift #AwsGlue

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Zero-ETL for self-managed Database Sources now available in 7 new regions AWS Glue now supports zero-ETL for self-managed database sources in seven additional regions. Using Glue zero-ETL, you can setup an integration to replicate data from Oracle, SQL Server, MySQL or PostgreSQL databases which are located on-premises or on AWS EC2 to Redshift with a simple experience that eliminates configuration complexity. AWS zero-ETL for self-managed database sources will automatically create an integration for an on-going replication of data from your on-premises or EC2 databases through a simple, no-code interface. You can now replicate data from Oracle, SQL Server, MySQL and PostgreSQL databases into Redshift. This feature further reduces users' operational burden and saves weeks of engineering effort needed to design, build, and test data pipelines to ingest data from self-managed databases to Redshift. AWS Glue zero-ETL for self-managed database sources are available in the following additional AWS Regions: Asia Pacific (Hong Kong), Asia Pacific (Tokyo), Asia Pacific (Singapore), Asia Pacific (Sydney), Europe (London), South America (São Paulo), and US (Virginia) regions. To get started, sign into the AWS Management Console. For more information visit the AWS Glue page or review the AWS Glue zero-ETL documentation.

🆕 AWS Glue introduces zero-ETL for self-managed databases in 7 new regions: HK, Tokyo, Singapore, Sydney, London, São Paulo, and Virginia. It eases data replication from Oracle, SQL Server, MySQL, or PostgreSQL to Redshift, cutting down e…

#AWS #AwsDatabaseMigrationService #AmazonRedshift #AwsGlue

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Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x Driver now supports Apple macOS https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/ ODBC 2.x driver now supports Apple macOS, expanding platform compatibility for developers and analysts. This enhancement allows Apple macOS users to connect to Amazon Redshift clusters using the latest Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x driver version. You can use an ODBC connection to connect to your Amazon Redshift cluster from many third-party SQL client tools and applications. The Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x native driver support enables you to access Amazon Redshift features such as https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/dg/getting-started-datashare-writes.html capabilities and https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/mgmt/redshift-iam-access-control-idp-connect.html - features that are only available through Amazon Redshift drivers. This native Apple macOS support enables seamless integration with Extract, Transform, Load (ETL) and Business Intelligence (BI) tools, allowing you to use Apple macOS while accessing the full suite of Amazon Redshift capabilities. We recommend that you upgrade to the latest Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x driver version to access new features. For installation instructions and system requirements, please see the Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x driver https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/mgmt/odbc20-install-config-mac.html.

Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x Driver now supports Apple macOS

https://aws.amazon.com/redshift/ ODBC 2.x driver now supports Apple macOS, expanding platform compatibility for developers and analysts. This enhancement allows Apple macOS users to connect to Amazon Redshift cluste...

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x Driver now supports Apple macOS Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x driver now supports Apple macOS, expanding platform compatibility for developers and analysts. This enhancement allows Apple macOS users to connect to Amazon Redshift clusters using the latest Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x driver version. You can use an ODBC connection to connect to your Amazon Redshift cluster from many third-party SQL client tools and applications. The Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x native driver support enables you to access Amazon Redshift features such as data sharing write capabilities and Amazon IAM Identity Center integration - features that are only available through Amazon Redshift drivers. This native Apple macOS support enables seamless integration with Extract, Transform, Load (ETL) and Business Intelligence (BI) tools, allowing you to use Apple macOS while accessing the full suite of Amazon Redshift capabilities. We recommend that you upgrade to the latest Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x driver version to access new features. For installation instructions and system requirements, please see the Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x driver documentation.

🆕 Amazon Redshift ODBC 2.x driver now supports Apple macOS, enhancing compatibility for developers. Users can connect to Redshift clusters via third-party SQL tools, accessing features like data sharing and IAM integration. Upgrade to the latest driver for full capabilities.

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift Serverless announces the general availability of dual-stack mode supporting IPV6 Amazon Redshift Serverless announces the general availability of dual-stack mode that supports Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6). This enhancement enables you to modernize your network infrastructure and meet the growing demands of internet connectivity. Redshift Serverless supports configuring your Redshift workgroups with both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses (dual-stack) or IPv4-only configurations within your AWS Virtual Private Clouds (VPCs). You can enable IPv6 support when creating new Redshift Serverless workgroups or modify existing workgroups to support IPv6 addressing. With this capability, you can deploy Redshift warehouses in IPv6-enabled VPC subnets and configure network settings to support the expanding address space requirements of your applications. Your applications can now communicate with Redshift warehouses using either IPv4 or IPv6 protocols, ensuring compatibility with both existing and future network architectures. This feature is available in all https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/global-infrastructure/regional-product-services/ where Redshift Serverless is available. To get started, read the https://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/mgmt/working-with-serverless.html and https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/big-data/ipv6-addressing-with-amazon-redshift/.

Amazon Redshift Serverless announces the general availability of dual-stack mode supporting IPV6

Amazon Redshift Serverless announces the general availability of dual-stack mode that supports Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6). This enhancement enables you to modernize yo...

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon Redshift Serverless announces the general availability of dual-stack mode supporting IPV6 Amazon Redshift Serverless announces the general availability of dual-stack mode that supports Internet Protocol version 6 (IPv6). This enhancement enables you to modernize your network infrastructure and meet the growing demands of internet connectivity. Redshift Serverless supports configuring your Redshift workgroups with both IPv4 and IPv6 addresses (dual-stack) or IPv4-only configurations within your AWS Virtual Private Clouds (VPCs). You can enable IPv6 support when creating new Redshift Serverless workgroups or modify existing workgroups to support IPv6 addressing. With this capability, you can deploy Redshift warehouses in IPv6-enabled VPC subnets and configure network settings to support the expanding address space requirements of your applications. Your applications can now communicate with Redshift warehouses using either IPv4 or IPv6 protocols, ensuring compatibility with both existing and future network architectures. This feature is available in all AWS commercial regions where Redshift Serverless is available. To get started, read the documentation and blog.

🆕 Amazon Redshift Serverless now supports IPv6 in dual-stack mode, enabling IPv4 and IPv6 addresses for workgroups in AWS VPCs. This boosts network infrastructure and future-proofs applications with IPv4 or IPv6 communication. Available in all commercial regions. Read the doc…

#AWS #AmazonRedshift

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Amazon S3 Storage Lens adds performance metrics, support for billions of prefixes, and export to S3 Tables New capabilities help optimize application performance, analyze unlimited prefixes, and simplify metrics analysis through S3 Tables integration.

Amazon S3 Storage Lens adds performance metrics, support for billions of prefixes, and export to S3 Tables

New capabilities help optimize appli...

#AWS #AmazonAthena #AmazonCloudwatch #AmazonEmr #AmazonQuicksight #AmazonRedshift #AmazonS3Tables #AmazonSimpleStorageService(S3) #Analytics #Storage

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