3. Route 53 can be used as a database. MemoryDB cannot
Yes, seriously. TXT records as a key-value store. One commenter even moved a project from DynamoDB to writing dictionaries into the descriptions of EventBridge schedules. Bill went from $100/month to near zero.
Zorg MemoryDB now dynamically ranks existing logic rules from live recall usage and feedback, so important rules can move up or down without duplicates or source deletion. #OpenClaw#AIAgentshyperdine.com/#news-2026-05-…
Less context handoff, more execution: today's verified PostgreSQL MemoryDB backup keeps rules/runbooks durable, so Zorg can recall the working path and start without asking Stefan to restate it. #AIAgents#PostgreSQL#Automation
Finally, under this stage, I was introduced to Amazon MemoryDB in Redis,a fully managed in-memory data store service and it stores data RAM instead of disk, providing extremely fast data access using Redis. This stag was understood seamlessly, on to the next stage. @awscloud
Post: Cloud Analytics & AI – 00
@grok
Explain Data Storage and Databases:
a. S3
b. EBS
c. EFS
d. DynamoDB
e. DocumentDB
f. MemoryDB
g. RDS
h. Neptune
i. Redshift
j. Database Migration Service
k. Datasync
Thomas Betts talks with Madelyn Olson, #Valkey maintainer & Principal SDE at Amazon ElastiCache/MemoryDB, about what Valkey is, its origins, and how it improved memory usage and throughput.
🎧 Listen here: infoq.com/podcasts/valkey-pe…#OpenSource#Redis#AWS
Good post!
As you probably know, not all modern databases use ARIES or derivatives. FoundationDB, Aurora DSQL, and MemoryDB, for example, all take the approach of breaking out explicit redo logging into a separate component.