AWS Database Blog

Category: Partner solutions

Enhance the reliability of airlines’ mission-critical baggage handling using Amazon DynamoDB

In the world of air travel, baggage handling isn’t just about keeping track of baggage, but a seamless orchestration of different processes to improve the passenger baggage experience. A key component to make this happen is a strong database management strategy. In this post, we discuss how AWS Partner IBM Consulting developed an initiative to modernize a traditional baggage database architecture using Amazon DynamoDB and other Amazon Web Services (AWS) managed services, addressing the evolving needs of the airline industry.

How Firmex used AWS SCT and AWS DMS to move 65,000 on-premises Microsoft SQL Server databases to an Amazon Aurora PostgreSQL cluster

This post is co-authored with Eric Boyer and Maria Hristova of Firmex. Firmex is a leading Virtual Data Room provider with more than 20,000 new rooms opened every year. In this post, we discuss how and why Firmex migrated 65,000 databases heterogeneously from their on-premises SQL Server to Amazon Aurora PostgreSQL-Compatible Edition.

How Scopely scaled “Stumble Guys” for millions of players around the globe with Amazon RDS for SQL Server

Scopely is a global games developer, operator, and publisher with operations across North America, Central America, EMEA, and Asia, and additional studio partners spanning four continents. Over the past year, Scopely has served more than 500 million players with major titles such as “MONOPOLY GO!,” “Stumble Guys,” “MARVEL Strike Force,” “Star Trek Fleet Command,” and “Scrabble GO.” In this post, we showcase how Scopely used CloudBasix to enable migration of “Stumble Guys” high-volume backend transactional databases with minimal downtime from Azure SQL database to Amazon RDS for Server.

How Prisma Cloud built Infinity Graph using Amazon Neptune and Amazon OpenSearch Service

Palo Alto Network’s Prisma Cloud is a leading cloud security platform protecting enterprise cloud adoption from code to cloud workflows. Palo Alto Networks chose Amazon Neptune Database and Amazon OpenSearch Service as the core services to power its Infinity Graph. In this post, we discuss the scale Palo Alto Networks requires from these core services and how we were able to design a solution to meet these needs. We focus on the Neptune design decisions and benefits, and explain how OpenSearch Service fits into the design without diving into implementation details.