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by toss1
1658 days ago
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>>It's smart politics -- I don't blame them Um, so you think straight-up lying is good politics? Any 7-year old knows that telling a lie when you broke something makes you look better superficially, especially if you get away with it. That does not mean that we should think it is a good idea to tell lies when you break things. It sure as hell isn't smart politics in my book. It is straight-up disqualifying to do business with them. If they are not honest about the status or amount of service they are providing, how is that different than lying about your prices? Would you go to a petrol station that posted $x.00/gallon, but only delivered 3 quarts for each gallon shown on the pump? We're being shortchanged and lied to. Fascinating that you think it is good politics on their part. |
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AWS spends a lot of time thinking about this problem in service to their customers.
How do you reduce the status of millions of machines, the software they run, and the interconnected-ness of those systems to a single graphical indicator?
It would be dumb and useless to turn something red every single time anything had a problem. Literally there are hundreds of things broken every minute of every day. On-call engineers are working around the clock on these problems. Most of the problems either don’t affect anyone due to redundancy or affect only a tiny number of customers- a failed memory module or top-of-rack switch or a random bit flip in one host for one service.
Would it help anyone to tell everyone about all these problems? People would quickly learn to ignore it as it had no bearing on their experience.
What you’re really arguing is that you don’t like the thresholds they’ve chosen. That’s fine, everyone has an opinion. The purpose of health dashboards like these are mostly so that customers can quickly get an answer to “is it them or me” when there’s a problem.
As others on this thread have pointed out, AWS has done a pretty good job of making the SHD align with the subjective experience of most customers. They also have personal health dashboards unique to each customer, but I assume thresholding is still involved.