|
|
|
|
|
by woutr_be
1991 days ago
|
|
> This is unavoidable for many companies, since the code bases are far to large for any single person to grasp them all. That's true, but this was the takeaway from the entire article: > "When we remove that feeling of “I need to know how allllll of this works, but just enough so that I can rescue it when it breaks”, we facilitate the mental room to iterate on our team’s systems with greater depth." To me it sounds like they've now introduced exactly that feeling with micro-services, developers now need to know how all services and front-ends work, and how they interact with each other. Maybe the article is poorly structured, but if that's the entire takeaway from moving to micro-services and micro-frontends, then I do question their choice. > Netflix https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZ3wIuvmHeM Netflix is indeed one example. It's hard to argue it doesn't work, but from my experience, it never worked out the way it was envisioned. |
|