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Lightning AI vs Redgate Flyway comparison

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Executive Summary

Review summaries and opinions

We asked business professionals to review the solutions they use. Here are some excerpts of what they said:
 

Categories and Ranking

Arctera Insight Platform
Sponsored
Average Rating
0
Number of Reviews
0
Ranking in other categories
Data Governance (61st), Compliance Management (31st)
Lightning AI
Average Rating
8.6
Number of Reviews
2
Ranking in other categories
AWS Marketplace (71st)
Redgate Flyway
Average Rating
7.4
Number of Reviews
5
Ranking in other categories
AWS Marketplace (19th)
 

Featured Reviews

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Shravan Revanna - PeerSpot reviewer
Product Engineer at a non-profit with 51-200 employees
Rapid experimentation has transformed our AI prototyping and collaboration workflows
There are definitely a few areas where Lightning AI can improve. Overall, we have had a positive impact, but there are definitely a few areas it could enhance. One area is cost visibility and resource management. There are multiple teams running experiments, GPUs, and long-running sessions. It is not always obvious how much compute is being consumed and what the projected costs might be. More granular visibility and alerts would help the team manage usage proactively. Another area is workspace and project organization. As the number of experiments grows, it can become difficult to keep projects, notebooks, data sets, and test environments organized. Better lifecycle management could help achieve this and discoverability would be useful for larger teams. We have also encountered situations where long-running sessions or development environments needed more resilience. While this is not unique to Lightning AI, interruptions during model training and experimentation can be frustrating, especially when working with larger data sets. From an enterprise perspective, I think there is room to strengthen governance and operational control. Features around permissions, auditability, environment standardization, and usage policies become increasingly important as adoption expands across teams. I would particularly appreciate better support for moving successful experiments into production workflows. There could be better cost and resource visibility, stronger project and experiment organization, improved reliability for long-running sessions, stronger governance capabilities, and a smoother journey from experimentation to production. None of these are major blockers for us, but these are areas where the platform could become more valuable as the team and workload scale. A minor annoyance would be stronger project and experiment organization. When more data sets and more projects come into place, it becomes difficult to organize, and keeping them in a standardized way becomes slightly difficult. That is an area I wanted to highlight. There is not much of a pain point. There are a few minor suggestions I would mention, such as observability and experiment tracking at scale. When teams start running many experiments across different models, it becomes increasingly important to have a clear view of what changed and why performance improved or declined. That could be one area. Another area is cross-team discoverability. As AI adoption grows within an organization, valuable experiments and reusable components can be scattered. Better mechanisms for surfacing reusable workflows and templates would be beneficial. I would also appreciate continued investment in LLM and agent development workflows. The AI landscape is evolving rapidly. These suggestions come from the perspective of a team that is using the platform heavily. Most of the core capabilities work well today, which is why the feedback is more about helping the platform scale with a growing AI organization rather than fixing major shortcomings.
Hassan F - PeerSpot reviewer
Full Stack Developer at DPL
Automated database releases have reduced errors and now save a full day of deployment effort
The best features that Redgate Flyway offers, if I had to pick a few that really stand out, would be multi-environment support. On the migrations tab, I do not need to go to an environment and change settings or anything. I simply change the branches of the environment and it shows me what is available and what has been run on a certain environment. The environment feature is very user-friendly and helpful, so I would keep it at the top of my list. The feature of changing branches on the migrations tab is very helpful. An example of how Redgate Flyway specifically helped with discrepancies is that previously we did not have any tool recording database changes. We work on an Agile Scrum pattern, so we have to do deployments frequently, within every two to three weeks or sometimes four weeks. Previously, we had code repositories for front-end and back-end, but for the database side, we did not have any repository. We were not saving database-related changes in any GitHub or AWS CodeCommit repositories. Every time, we have a Jira board where developers update their scripts. For example, if I work on a ticket and update a stored procedure, I must mention the stored procedure on the ticket. When deployment time arrives, the release manager must pull out or scan all the tickets and extract the objects. For example, if we deploy 10 Jira tickets from a sprint in the next release, we must go through all 10 tickets and see the post-deployments of their tickets. Then we extracted the objects from the development environment, deployed on stage, and then deployed on production. In this scenario, many objects and discrepancies occurred. Sometimes a developer or the release manager would forget the object to take to production. Now, after using Redgate Flyway, I have restricted access as the release manager of my team. I manage the release for my team and have restricted developer access to environments other than the development environment. If developers want to take anything to the next environment such as demo, staging, or production, they must make a script. When they create a script, it is in our record. Now, after using Redgate Flyway, we do not need to scan all the tickets on Jira or see the post-deployments of each ticket. We simply view the Redgate Flyway script showing what has been run from this to this version, and what pending deployments need to be run on production. In this way, it has helped tremendously. I can share that the migrations tab and branch changing helped my team in a specific situation during our second last sprint. Two developers were working on the same object, and one change needed to be deployed on stage while another change needed to be deployed on the demo environment, which is our QA level. Our QA and demo are the same environment, and then we have stage and production. We have three environments other than development. Previously, without Redgate Flyway, what could have happened is that we would take the stored procedure from demo if we needed to deploy it on stage and take it directly to stage. This was our previous practice where we would go to the database explorer, take the stored procedure, and move it to the next environment with the ticket. Now with Redgate Flyway, we have different versions of that stored procedure. We simply took the version of the stored procedure that needed to be on stage, and the second version that needed to be on the QA level remained there. Redgate Flyway helped in this case, and we have many cases.
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Top Industries

By visitors reading reviews
No data available
Construction Company
38%
University
15%
Manufacturing Company
9%
Outsourcing Company
6%
Construction Company
36%
Comms Service Provider
16%
Financial Services Firm
10%
Manufacturing Company
9%
 

Company Size

By reviewers
Large Enterprise
Midsize Enterprise
Small Business
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By reviewers
Company SizeCount
Small Business3
Large Enterprise4
 

Questions from the Community

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What is your experience regarding pricing and costs for Redgate Flyway?
My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing is that it is a very cost-effective and affordable tool.
What needs improvement with Redgate Flyway?
I believe Redgate Flyway can be improved by making the object mapping available in the community edition. It would be...
What is your primary use case for Redgate Flyway?
Redgate Flyway is my primary tool for database migrations, especially for solutions based on the Java programming lan...
 

Overview

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