We saw Skunk Anansie just over a year ago and I haven’t seen Garbage since the Version 2.0 tour in 90s - the best time to have seen them in my opinion. When the opportunity to see them both together came up, of course Charlotte wanted to go - despite it being half way across the country. Soon after we bought the tickets, Garbage announced a gig at the Roundhouse, which would have been closer, cheaper and far more convenient. Support came from Ian Davies and Du Blonde. We eventually figured out that the DJ playing when we arrived was Ian Davies, he had some good tunes, especially when he kept to the 90s. Du Blonde was quite good, the sort of Indie Rock band which were common in the 90s, singing about similar themes, such as the music industry. Probably the best which can be said about Garbage is they were good. The two guitarists were lackluster, but of course Shirley Manson was great, marching around, in bright red boots, like she owned the stage - which of course she did. Great ...
I Asked an AI to Build Me a Bank Data Platform. Here's What Happened. Claude wrote this post for me and we reviewed and revised it together. I know this won't be popular with at least a few of my regular readers, but it felt like the right thing to do given the project it's describing. Lambdas don't play well with RDS databases. Connection pooling, VPC cold starts, idle timeouts — it's a well-documented headache. But a Lambda is the obvious choice for a cloud-native Open Banking API implementation. And RDS is usually the best choice when you want to query and analyse data. I'd hit this tension before and never resolved it cleanly. So I wanted to see if Apache Iceberg could be the answer. It works with Lambdas (just write Parquet files to S3), and it can be queried like a relational database via Spark or Athena. I was also keen to see what the Lambda integration actually looked like in practice. I decided to pair with Claude Code on the build — treating it...