It was to talk about “team restructuring”

  • You are paying aws to not have one big server, so you get high availability and dynamic load balancing as instances come and go.

    I agree its not cheaper than being on prem. But it’s much higher quality solutions.

    Today at work, they decided to upgrade from ancient Ubuntu version to a more recent version. Since they don’t use aws properly, they treat servers as pets. So to upgrade Ubuntu, they actually upgraded Ubuntu on the instance instead of creating a new one. This led to grub failing and now they are troubleshooting how to mount disks etc.

    All of this could easily be avoided by using the cloud properly.

    •  wim   ( @wim@lemmy.sdf.org ) 
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      10 months ago

      I used to work on an on premise object storage system before, where we required double digits of “nines” availability. High availability is not rocket science. Most scenarios are covered by having 2 or 3 machines.

      I’d also wager that using the cloud properly is a different skillset than properly managing or upgrading a Linux system, not necessarily a cheaper or better one from a company point of view.