Membro Do Conselho Consultivo at a computer software company with 5,001-10,000 employees
Real User
Top 10
Oct 27, 2025
I have experience with AWS. I have about five years of experience with AWS products. The AWS products I deal with include virtual machines, EC2, database, basic storage, S3, and basic usage. I have experience with virtual machines, specifically Amazon EC2. I have experience with Amazon EC2, the Amazon virtual machine. In my use case, it wasn't necessary to have Multi-AZ deployments in Amazon RDS on Outposts, even if it's more expensive; I only needed one AZ. I found Amazon RDS on Outposts very easy to assess the compatibility with various databases such as PostgreSQL and MySQL. There was a use case where my customer had a MySQL database, and it was very easy to migrate the simple MySQL to the correspondent Amazon RDS on Outposts. There wasn't anything specific in the database such as stored procedures that complicated the migration. The company I have this consultancy with previously provisioned the database by installing the MySQL database on an EC2 instance, managing it with our team, and then they migrated this MySQL installed on EC2 to Amazon RDS on Outposts. It was a use case.
Architect - Database Administration at Mitra Innovation
Real User
Top 5
Jun 6, 2024
My company uses Amazon RDS for three to five of our clients, of which one is for a fitness application meant for social well-being. One of the Other use cases associated with the product is related to a restaurant application used to manage the ordering system. One of our company's other clients is a not-for-profit organization that uses the tool for transactional information regarding certain activities.
Amazon RDS on Outposts extends AWS cloud benefits to on-premises setups, offering seamless database management with low latency. It's tailored for users requiring consistent infrastructure technologies both on-premises and in the cloud. Designed to provide managed database services using the familiar AWS ecosystem, Amazon RDS on Outposts supports popular databases such as MySQL, PostgreSQL, and SQL Server. It delivers the same AWS APIs, functionalities, and tools for a unified experience....
I have experience with AWS. I have about five years of experience with AWS products. The AWS products I deal with include virtual machines, EC2, database, basic storage, S3, and basic usage. I have experience with virtual machines, specifically Amazon EC2. I have experience with Amazon EC2, the Amazon virtual machine. In my use case, it wasn't necessary to have Multi-AZ deployments in Amazon RDS on Outposts, even if it's more expensive; I only needed one AZ. I found Amazon RDS on Outposts very easy to assess the compatibility with various databases such as PostgreSQL and MySQL. There was a use case where my customer had a MySQL database, and it was very easy to migrate the simple MySQL to the correspondent Amazon RDS on Outposts. There wasn't anything specific in the database such as stored procedures that complicated the migration. The company I have this consultancy with previously provisioned the database by installing the MySQL database on an EC2 instance, managing it with our team, and then they migrated this MySQL installed on EC2 to Amazon RDS on Outposts. It was a use case.
I am building servers for SaaS applications.
We use the solution for our existing company website and HRMS. We use it to store HRMS and user data.
We use the solution primarily to support websites.
My company uses Amazon RDS for three to five of our clients, of which one is for a fitness application meant for social well-being. One of the Other use cases associated with the product is related to a restaurant application used to manage the ordering system. One of our company's other clients is a not-for-profit organization that uses the tool for transactional information regarding certain activities.