Remix.run Logo
shiandow 10 hours ago

That's a bit like the 'nobody was fired for choosing Oracle' argument, but it does make sense.

Still a bit weird to pretend we now have cyber weather that takes our webpages down.

julianozen 9 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Definitely has similarities. I think we do not realize how most top websites and services rarely go down anymore, and we use them 100 times more than we did 20 years ago. Building your own networking, compute, storage, CDN, or database solutions to avoid dependencies on AWS or Cloudflare would almost certainly lead to more service downtime than relying on highly sophisticated third parties.

But now, when one of these services breaks, everything on the internet goes down. And it is a lot easier to explain to your director of engineering that the whole internet is down than to say that your custom home-rolled storage system fell over, or whatever esoteric infrastructure failure you may run into doing it yourself.

MattGaiser 10 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

> That's a bit like the 'nobody was fired for choosing Oracle' argument, but it does make sense.

The reaction to AWS US-East-1 going down demonstrates this. As so many others were in the same boat, companies got a pass on their infrastructure failing. Everyone was understanding.