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by dig1
240 days ago
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> The general setup for the largest players in that space was haproxy in front of nginx in front of several PHP servers in front of a MySQL database that had one primary r/w with one read only replica. You'd be surprised that the most stable setups today are run this way. The problem is that this way it's hard to attract investors; they'll assume you are running on old or outdated tech. Everything should be serverless, agentic and, at least on paper, hyperscalable, because that sells further. > Today at AWS, it is easily possible for people to spend a multiple of the cost of that hardware setup every month for far less compute power and storage. That is actually the goal of hyperscalers: they are charging you premium for way inferior results. Also, the article stated a very cold truth: "every engineer wants a fashionable CV that will help her get the next job" and you won't definitely get a job if you said: "I moved everything from AWS and put it behind haproxy on one bare-metal box for $100/mo infra bill". |
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Investors don't give a shit about your stack