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Aiven + Lovable.dev integration

Developers love tools that make their workflows smoother, and that’s why the idea of integrating Aiven with Lovable.dev is so exciting! While not an official integration (yet), combining Aiven's fully managed cloud services with Lovable.dev’s focus on delightful developer experiences opens up new possibilities. Imagine streamlined database management, improved performance, and a more enjoyable development workflow, all with the tools you already love.

Aiven AI Insights - Ongoing Performance Actionable Insights

The Aiven Platform is more than a collection of open source services for streaming, storing and analyzing data. The platform ensures that all services run reliably and securely in the clouds of your choice, are observable, and can easily be integrated with each other and with external 3rd party tools.

Multi-Version Connector Support for Apache Kafka Now Available

Connecting the data across your business and getting it where it needs to be can often be challenging and place undue operational stress across your application, infrastructure, and platform teams. Apache Kafka, and in particular the Apache Kafka Connect framework simplifies these pain points by allowing you to use Kafka to transport data from where it is produced, to where it needs to be stored, analyzed, or transformed.

ClickHouse Pricing Made Simple. Choose Aiven.

Aiven for ClickHouse has become a favorite on the platform thanks to its blazing-fast analytical querying, built specifically to handle the unique challenges of OLAP workloads. It excels at crunching massive datasets in real-time, making it a favorite for demanding applications like log analytics, web analytics, and ad tech. At Aiven, we understand the power that ClickHouse can unlock for businesses of any size.

16 Ways Tiered Storage Makes Apache Kafka Simpler, Better, and Cheaper

Tiered Storage for Apache Kafka is a simple idea that goes a longway. At its bare bones, it basically means: store most of the Kafka broker’s data in another server, e.g AWS S3. On the surface, it sounds insignificant—like a minor architectural tweak with minimal impact.