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by HardwareLust
218 days ago
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It's money, of course. No one wants to pay for resilience/redundancy. I've launched over a dozen projects going back to 2008, clients simply refuse to pay for it, and you can't force them. They'd rather pinch their pennies, roll the dice and pray. |
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> No one wants to pay for resilience/redundancy. I've launched over a dozen projects going back to 2008, clients simply refuse to pay for it, and you can't force them. They'd rather pinch their pennies, roll the dice and pray.
Well, fly by night outfits will do that. Bigger operations like GitHub will try to do the math on what an outage costs vs what better reliability costs, and optimize accordingly.
Look at a big bank or a big corporation's accounting systems, they'll pay millions just for the hot standby mainframes or minicomputers that, for most of them, would never be required.