- cross-posted to:
- linux_lugcast@lemux.minnix.dev
- cross-posted to:
- linux_lugcast@lemux.minnix.dev
The tech world has been abuzz with discussions about cloud repatriation, the practice of moving workloads from public clouds back The post Why Companies Are Ditching the Cloud: The Rise of Cloud Repatriation appeared first on The New Stack.
Hear hear.
The cloud is just other people’s computers
so many tools available now to basically do the same thing as the big guys, but on your own hardware, in your own space.
Hell, The tools have always been there for business, where in-house expertise is the norm (or contracted, especially for SMB).
The people who pushed for cloud were bean counters, senior IT management, etc, because those costs are an expenditure for services (reduces your tax liability also while offloading risk to the vendor). While keeping it in-house means buying equipment and owning it, which increases tax liability and keeps risk in-house. (They also thought they could reduce staff, haha, nope!)
There’s a place for doing this, for sure. Things like email hosting, especially for small business where they just aren’t going to have the staff to manage the spam, etc. But that’s paying an email vendor to manage the service. Bit of a different animal.
Or for enterprise, having the flexibility to quickly spin up new resources for expansion. Or redundancy. Or for a new small business, you can spin up resources as needed until you’ve determined what you actually need, then migrate to local (or not, if the venture isn’t successful).
For home, yea, there’s lots of stuff available these days, more than you can shake a stick at. Some of the simpler things like CasaOS and FreedomBox are simple enough for moderately technical people.
But generally it’s not a good choice to go cloud.
It baffles me that people thought the “cloud” was this super idea.
You have to pay someone to doethe work either way so it makes sense to outsource to an expert. However those experts didn’t deliver the lower cost that they should have enabled.
The cloud is fantastic, for some applications, getting rid of physical servers needing maintenance/servicing is a huge cost savings for a small company.
Several years ago I worked at a company that ran a SAN, there was an issue with the server room (a purpose built one) which affected the SAN, which resulted in drive failures every week or sometimes multiple times a week.
With the cloud you don’t get that worry, or rather you pay someone else to deal with it for you, which sometimes makes sense.