It's 2029
You just bought a PS6
It cost 1200 dollars
All games are digital
They each cost 80 dollars
You have 4 in your library
Yesterday it was 5 but Sony removed one
They offered no refund, its just gone
You'd strangle yourself with the controller cord but its wireless
We just shipped one of the coolest free database perf tools
It's a SQL execution plan visualizer which helps you spot things like a missing index, full-table scan, or inefficient join
Just paste the EXPLAIN output and find out why your query is slow:
https://t.co/b3Uo3vJ3so
99.9% of the time, you don't need Kubernetes for your workload.
Start simple, you can always migrate later. Almost nobody regrets delaying Kubernetes but a lot of people regret adopting it too early.
Premature Kubernetes is the new premature microservices.
For like 99.9 percent of workloads, this stack is enough:
One or two VMs
Docker Compose
Managed database
Managed load balancer
Backups
That setup is boring, and boring is good.
It is easier to understand, cheaper, faster to debug, and any engineer can log in and fix something at 2am without needing an expert in controllers and CRDs.