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PeteXXX

Cake or ice cream? The choice is endless ...
Location
Hamtun
Screenshot_20251118-113312.png

Just me or you, too? 🤔

🤷‍♂️
 

deptfordmarmoset

Full time tea drinker
Location
Armonmy Way
Yep, me too. Naughty Cloudfare!
 

Psamathe

Über Member
Highlights one of the massive shortcomings in the way the internet has become structured. With a few very major players each working on lower costs=higher profits ... results in one hiccup causing massive failures. Just as recently with Amazon.

We (as a species) seem very good at creating very un-resilient systems which have no technical reasons for the fragility, just commercial.
 
 

Dogtrousers

Lefty tighty. Get it righty.
Highlights one of the massive shortcomings in the way the internet has become structured. With a few very major players each working on lower costs=higher profits ... results in one hiccup causing massive failures. Just as recently with Amazon.

We (as a species) seem very good at creating very un-resilient systems which have no technical reasons for the fragility, just commercial.

There is much truth in what you say. I used to work in disaster recovery testing for a while in the 90s. We took it all very seriously. I think there's less rigour about it these days. But it's a lot cheaper.
 
Highlights one of the massive shortcomings in the way the internet has become structured. With a few very major players each working on lower costs=higher profits ... results in one hiccup causing massive failures. Just as recently with Amazon.

We (as a species) seem very good at creating very un-resilient systems which have no technical reasons for the fragility, just commercial.

Wasn't the whole point of the internet supposed to be lots of duplicated connections so it would be more resilient?
 

presta

Legendary Member
Highlights one of the massive shortcomings in the way the internet has become structured. With a few very major players each working on lower costs=higher profits ... results in one hiccup causing massive failures. Just as recently with Amazon.

We (as a species) seem very good at creating very un-resilient systems which have no technical reasons for the fragility, just commercial.
There's a direct trade-off between resilience and efficiency, and with the current obsession with growth and productivity, the latter always wins. It costs money to build redundancy into a system, and if you're lucky, you never get that money back again.
 
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