Amazon Redshift is based on an older version of PostgreSQL8.0.2, and Redshift has made changes to that version.[5][6] An initial preview beta was released in November 2012[7] and a full release was made available on February 15, 2013. The service can handle connections from most other applications using ODBC and JDBC connections.[8]
According to Cloud Data Warehouse report published by Forrester in Q4 2018, Amazon Redshift had the largest number of cloud data warehouse deployments, with more than 6,500 deployments.[9]
Redshift uses parallel processing and compression to decrease command execution time.[10] This allows Redshift to perform operations on billions of rows at once.[11] This also makes Redshift useful for storing and analyzing large quantities of data from logs or live feeds through a source such as Amazon Kinesis Data Firehose.[11]
The "Red" in Redshift's name alludes to Oracle, a competing computer technology company sometimes informally referred to as "Big Red" due to its red corporate color. Hence, customers choosing to move their databases from Oracle to Redshift would be "shifting" from "Red".[15]
^"APN - Amazon Redshift Partners - Pentaho". AWS. Amazon. Archived from the original on November 15, 2019. Retrieved February 6, 2017. Pentaho has certified its business analytics and data integration platform to work with Amazon Redshift.
^"Amazon Web Services". Pentaho.com. Archived from the original on April 1, 2018. Retrieved February 6, 2017. then transformed, refined, and immediately pushed into Amazon Redshift.