> I don't think you're framing the issue from an educated standpoint.
And I think you'd make a better point without the personal remarks and/or skepticism over my competence.
I mean, was all this really necessary to make your point?
> myopic, naive, clueless take
> specious reasoning
> If you work on single-person "teams" maintaining something that is barely used and does not even have SLAs and can be shut down for hours
> a place of clueless buzzwords
> not understanding what they are talking about
> hallmark of incompetence
I also think you're ignoring what I said about 30-odd years of resilience that came before microservices.
> For example, supporting very basic blue-green deployments that come for free in virtually any conceivable way to deploy services.
I'm genuinely confused here: what does that have to do with creating monoliths? Are you claiming that monoliths prevent a whole lot of good practices (blue-green, canary deployments, whatever)?
Because monoliths have been deployed in a gradual rollout fashion before, have been multi-sited for DR rollovers onto secondaries, have been deployed with hot rollovers, etc.
There are, right now, COBOL "monoliths" running and managing a significant part of your life.
And I think you'd make a better point without the personal remarks and/or skepticism over my competence.
I mean, was all this really necessary to make your point?
> myopic, naive, clueless take
> specious reasoning
> If you work on single-person "teams" maintaining something that is barely used and does not even have SLAs and can be shut down for hours
> a place of clueless buzzwords
> not understanding what they are talking about
> hallmark of incompetence
I also think you're ignoring what I said about 30-odd years of resilience that came before microservices.
> For example, supporting very basic blue-green deployments that come for free in virtually any conceivable way to deploy services.
I'm genuinely confused here: what does that have to do with creating monoliths? Are you claiming that monoliths prevent a whole lot of good practices (blue-green, canary deployments, whatever)?
Because monoliths have been deployed in a gradual rollout fashion before, have been multi-sited for DR rollovers onto secondaries, have been deployed with hot rollovers, etc.
There are, right now, COBOL "monoliths" running and managing a significant part of your life.