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by 0zemp1c
1156 days ago
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I expect almost everyone who tries to rebel and go "on prem" will flame out and come running back to the cloud Ops talent has really dumbed down over the last decade or so (sorry no polite way to say it). Long gone are the days when the ops engineers were talented devs who just liked hanging out at datacenters. Nowadays most of them are just button pushers who are good for standing up SaaS stacks or other simple tasks, but I'd never ask any I've dealt with in the last ten years to build out a datacenter presence from nothing. Most have never set foot in a datacenter. On top of that, most modern ops teams have been downsized (thanks to cloud) that they wouldn't have the hands to get the job done. Even for good ops people, it can be very hard to capacity-plan and understand what appropriate/affordable/useful hardware is. Most ops folks today have probably never purchased servers for production deployments. AWS will be happy to welcome these companies back after their on-prem dreams die. |
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Counterpoint, the ops required for your own infrastructure has greatly dumbed down.
It might surprise you, but OEM hardware solution have greatly evolved and simplified the same.
Now I can setup a core switch running 100 GBs with failovers by just plugging in some cables between them, setting a flag and they immediately start replicating config between themselves.
>Even for good ops people, it can be very hard to capacity-plan and understand what appropriate/affordable/useful hardware is. Most ops folks today have probably never purchased servers for production deployments.
I'll shock you once again, the same way AWS has sales and support departments that help spoonfeed what you need.
So do the hardware OEMs. I can get complete solution walkthroughs with Dell for example.