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by lmm
970 days ago
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It's not "just" a computer, a computer is a whole bunch of complicated stuff that I don't want to have to care about. I want to write some code and have it run and I don't want or need to care about the details of how that happens as long as it works reliably. Being able to ssh into your server is giving you more tools to fix problems, sure, but mostly problems that you created for yourself by having a server in the first place. |
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I'm sorry, this is an incredibly stupid take. You always "need" to care about the abstraction that your infrastructure is providing to you. Vercel also provides a abstraction in terms of serverless functions.
>I want to write some code and have it run and I don't want or need to care about the details of how that happens as long as it works reliably.
Yeah, same. As long as it works, I have no problem. Now add background tasks or streaming responses or a cron job. Oh, guess what, you have to suddenly care about the options your provider is giving you, or go out and buy some stupid cron-as-service or ssh-as-service because you don't have any control over your infrastructure. And now suddenly your infra is way more complicated than mine. I am still one that single dockerfile.
>Being able to ssh into your server is giving you more tools to fix problems, sure, but mostly problems that you created for yourself by having a server in the first place.
How is running a clean-up script anything to do with having a server? That is the most common use-case for ssh-ing into your server. In fact I am wracking my brains right now to come up with anytime I had a problem because of having a server and coming up short. Fly.io (or AWS, or GCP) has problems, for sure, but none of them are because I am running a server.