Stop Paying for Logs You Don’t Use: The FinTech Guide to Smart Observability

In the typical FinTech cloud bill, “Observability” is often the silent budget killer. It frequently ranks as the second or third largest infrastructure cost, trailing only compute and database storage. 

There is a consistent pattern across the industry: data is treated like a security blanket. The prevailing engineering philosophy operates on a fear-based principle: “Log everything, just in case.” 

The result is a staggering inefficiency. Organizations pay premium storage rates for terabytes of data that no human will ever read. 

In a high-volume FinTech environment processing millions of transactions daily, this isn’t just “overhead”—it is a drag on OpEx. It is time to stop treating observability as an unavoidable tax and start treating it as an asset class that requires active management.  Continue reading “Stop Paying for Logs You Don’t Use: The FinTech Guide to Smart Observability”

Secure, Serverless And Private: Hosting Static Sites with AWS S3 And CloudFront OAC

Modern platforms demand architectures that are not only fast and scalable but also impossible to attack at the storage layer. A static website might seem simple, but hosting it securely on AWS—without exposing S3 to the public internet—requires careful design.

As part of my DevOps journey, I was given a straightforward but strict objective: Continue reading “Secure, Serverless And Private: Hosting Static Sites with AWS S3 And CloudFront OAC”

Event Hub vs Confluent Cloud: Which One Should You Use and When?

In the world of streaming, ingestion and event-driven architectures, you’ll often come across two major managed services: Azure Event Hubs (Event Hubs) and Confluent Cloud. Though they overlap, they serve different organisational needs, technical maturity levels and architectural strategies. This article helps you decide which to adopt (or when to switch) based on your scenario. Continue reading “Event Hub vs Confluent Cloud: Which One Should You Use and When?”

The 50ms Revenue Gap: Why Speed Is The New Currency In FinTech

In e-commerce, a slow page load means a frustrated user. In high-stakes FinTech, a slow response means a lost asset. 

We often talk about “uptime” as the holy grail. But for platforms managing Real-Time Credit Decisioning or Algorithmic Trading, uptime is just the baseline. The real battleground is latency. 

There is a “Revenue Gap” that exists between a transaction taking 50ms and 200ms. In low-margin payments, this might be negligible. But in high-margin lending, that delay is the difference between capturing a prime borrower and losing them to a competitor.  Continue reading “The 50ms Revenue Gap: Why Speed Is The New Currency In FinTech”

From Messy Logs to Structured Analytics using AWS S3, Lambda, and Athena

Continue reading “From Messy Logs to Structured Analytics using AWS S3, Lambda, and Athena”