I'm working on a project for a major insurance company that wants to migrate their on-premise IBM servers to AWS. We were sold on it being an easy transition, but what we didn't realize is the massive amount of training, and analysis paralysis involved in the migration. We had to learn Terraform, all of the AWS services etc, and then hope the firewalls were configured correctly to allow traffic in and out. The entire project is pretty chaotic, and going slowly, so don't assume serverless and cloud migrations means less work and planning.
lol sounds like incompetence from the higher-ups. Migrating to the cloud has always been a daunting task especially on legacy apps. Then again, this is the type of incompetence you can expect from major corporations especially higher-ups.
what do you think about people who build their application on serverless and try to make the transition to cloud native? (please whisper me on twitter though!!! (giving you those algo juices))
Very informative! I learned a lot from this video. However, I think there is a fundamental problem that will continue to lead to specialization and/or lock-in, which is the incentive to monetize. It's not a coincidence that tons of options popped up with specific apis that lock you in to their products, or that big cloud providers are trying to provide "alternatives" to fragmentation that still lock you into their ecosystem. Lock in is something every profit driven organization is going to be incentivized into and specialization helps smaller organizations compete with larger organizations that try to offer more generalized solutions (that lock you in to their ecosystem). It is simply more difficult and/or expensive to work towards generic solutions, and leaving lock-in off the table makes it harder to ensure your org gets paid. I don't think it's impossible, just very unlikely.
Do you have a link for serverless & architect frameworks - since they're pretty common terms identifying the specific framework is not straightforward?
Bro is way farther than u think, he hacked his brain by making it learn that he must work (record the video) and only THEN get the reward which is the strawberry xD
I'm working on a project for a major insurance company that wants to migrate their on-premise IBM servers to AWS. We were sold on it being an easy transition, but what we didn't realize is the massive amount of training, and analysis paralysis involved in the migration. We had to learn Terraform, all of the AWS services etc, and then hope the firewalls were configured correctly to allow traffic in and out. The entire project is pretty chaotic, and going slowly, so don't assume serverless and cloud migrations means less work and planning.
Exactly and it's a nightmare in GCP
lol sounds like incompetence from the higher-ups. Migrating to the cloud has always been a daunting task especially on legacy apps. Then again, this is the type of incompetence you can expect from major corporations especially higher-ups.
Lemme guess: you migrated WCS and/or MQ?
@@thefakewitchdoctor Right on both counts.
Great breakdown of the serverless space!
Yoo thanks! Honored to have you here
My man held the strawberry throughout the video. Love the music btw 💙
what do you think about people who build their application on serverless and try to make the transition to cloud native? (please whisper me on twitter though!!! (giving you those algo juices))
You're still the only person I've met who says "whisper" instead of "DM"
If you are working on solving the problem and bringing the best of both world, let's name that strawberry 🍓
Good video. Have an algorithm boost
Dude, I enjoy the way you break things down :0
Thanks!
Nice video, you are missing a new one on the block: winglang
On top of breaking things down I also really like the product recommendations
great video, great strawberry
It took me 7 minutes to notice the strawberry. Great breakdown tho
What to do you think? Which one is the ultimate stack for serverless apps
It's likely gonna be the self provisioning runtime, since it seems to be the simplest to adopt. But I can't say for sure obv
First 🍓
Very well put together video 👌🏼
Great video, keep up the good content
Very informative! I learned a lot from this video.
However, I think there is a fundamental problem that will continue to lead to specialization and/or lock-in, which is the incentive to monetize. It's not a coincidence that tons of options popped up with specific apis that lock you in to their products, or that big cloud providers are trying to provide "alternatives" to fragmentation that still lock you into their ecosystem. Lock in is something every profit driven organization is going to be incentivized into and specialization helps smaller organizations compete with larger organizations that try to offer more generalized solutions (that lock you in to their ecosystem). It is simply more difficult and/or expensive to work towards generic solutions, and leaving lock-in off the table makes it harder to ensure your org gets paid. I don't think it's impossible, just very unlikely.
Do you have a link for serverless & architect frameworks - since they're pretty common terms identifying the specific framework is not straightforward?
serverless.com
arc.codes
@@devagr Thanks 🙂
Great video, thank you so much! Could you please share the twitter thread from 5:04 🙏
Thats a fine point. But can your serverless solution do this? **drops database*
Bro your channel is great all you need to do is buy a better microphone. Other than that your content is great and you explain things very nicely.
Thanks a lot! Yeah I'm hoping to get that UA-cam money soon so that I can buy better equipment
Might be naive, but why don't we just abstract out the cloud to be localhost
💯🍓
Lol did you eat the strawberry at the start, just so that you holding the mike up wouldn't look wierd? xP
It didn't help xD
No I wanted to show that it's a real strawberry
Bro is way farther than u think, he hacked his brain by making it learn that he must work (record the video) and only THEN get the reward which is the strawberry xD