Want smarter insights in your inbox? Sign up for our weekly newsletters to get only what matters to enterprise AI, data, and security leaders. Subscribe Now

The database industry has undergone a quiet revolution over the past decade.

Traditional databases required administrators to provision fixed capacity, including both compute and storage resources. Even in the cloud, with database-as-a-service options, organizations were essentially paying for server capacity that sits idle most of the time but can handle peak loads. Serverless databases flip this model. They automatically scale compute resources up and down based on actual demand and charge only for what gets used.

Visa’s $3.5B Bet on AI

Amazon Web Services (AWS) pioneered this approach over a decade ago with its DynamoDB and has expanded it to relational databases with Aurora Serverless. Now, AWS is taking the next step in the serverless transformation of its database portfolio with the general availability of Amazon DocumentDB Serverless. This brings automatic scaling to MongoDB-compatible document databases.