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by dpark
2775 days ago
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The scenario being discussed was building a company on top of GCP and being unable to afford $200/month for support costs. Tell me what “mom and pop” shops are pulling in $10k/month from GCP-based software but are unwilling/unable to pay $200/month for the very thing that underpins their livelihoods? This is akin to saying that a mom and pop laundromat can’t afford insurance, or shouldn’t because they won’t frequently need it. You’re trying to equate small businesses with hobbies. You’ve now resorted to straw men, slippery slopes, and false equivalency. Maybe consider that if you have to distort the situation this much to make your point, you might just be wrong. > At the end of the day you probably pissed off quite a few people on here when you called their livelihood a hobby project. I didn’t say anything about anyone’s livelihood. You’re the one pretending that small businesses bringing home $120k/year can’t afford a $200 monthly support bill. I bet the guy who started this thread about GCP’s support cost has made a sum total of <$1000 from his “startup”. Likely <$10. Hobby. I don’t care if “quite a few people” got pissed about my comment. People with egos that delicate shouldn’t use social media. |
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I was trying to tell you that most small businesses can't go around spending hundreds of bucks of things that provide little value, whether that's a business support plans on services they use or something else. It's true regardless of whether you're a brick and mortar store or some online service.
> This is akin to saying that a mom and pop laundromat can’t afford insurance, or shouldn’t because they won’t frequently need it.
Speaking about about false equivalencies...
> You’re the one pretending that small businesses bringing home $120k/year can’t afford a $200 monthly support bill.
First off, I spoke of businesses making generally less than that.
Also (I already said this, good job ignoring that!) paying $200 bucks on a single useless thing is survivable for even a small business - but you know what's better than only making one bad business decision? Making no bad ones at all. Making too many will quickly break the camel's back.
Which was my whole argument and it's also what people generally refer to when they say they can't afford something.
For instance you may say "I can't afford to go to this restaurant", even though you'd have enough money to do it without going immediately bankrupt. But it'd be a bad decision, too many of which quickly add up.