@bonifartius@qoto.org What did he do this time?
@tyil nothing, sourcehut is getting ddos and it just is a good opportunity to move away from a service which reserves the right to delete accounts for political opinions :)
@bonifartius@qoto.org Ah, fair enough. I don't know if self-hosting Sourcehut is a lot of work, I do like the platform, so I can understand why people choose to use it. Its definitely an easier sell than Gitlab or Github, as Sourcehut is at least completely free software and uses standardized federated systems for communication.
@tyil it's a shame because in principle sourcehut is pretty nice.
self hosting is probably a bit complicated from what i have gathered over the years, it's somewhat of a microservice architecture.
@Moon
wanted to reply yesterday, then something happened and i forgot xD
interesting examples indeed! the use case i came across while work usually was "linux vm, only more expensive" :) i was aware of the horizontal scaling, but never have seen an example of "serverless" which made sense.
> This is not suitable for all uses.
i think this is one of the core issues. one has to know most of the pitfalls of the business case and also all the available technologies and their pitfalls. people who are really good at both, or organizations where both are communicating well are pretty rare from what i have seen. might to a degree be a problem of germany though: tech people chase the latest trends but are too conservative to go all in and reap the benefits so one ends with the "expensive vm" solutions.
i was lucky enough to not having to do modern frontend webshit, but what i am told is absolutely horrible.
backend is ok, but i think it's pretty boring that everything is on top of HTTP. i get that HTTP being stateless and short lived connections is pretty good for the mobile world behind NAT and shit, still feels bad that things are this way. it's great to at least use a language one likes. i still have to give elixir a try :)
@Moon@shitposter.club @bonifartius@qoto.org Probably, but the grass is always greener on the other side eh. The biggest benefit of IT jobs is that the pressure is generally quite low (once you're settled somewhere), and the pay is high enough to buy a house on a single income.
@bonifartius@qoto.org
hosting things is a very shit business now
It always was tbh, customers complaining all the time because they changed settings they shouldn't have and now some support employee is getting cursed at for hours.All of IT turned to worse shit with large investors wanting immense returns, absolutely destroying companies that were doing fine and could've ran fine for the indefinite future. All to make some exceptionally rich asshole just a tiny bit more rich, at the cost of hundreds or sometimes thousands of people just trying to do their jobs.
The longer I work as a "cloud engineer" (or developer/programmer before that), the worse I find IT as a field to have become. But I have bills to pay, so here I am. I'm genuinely curious to find out something else to do, something which I can thoroughly enjoy doing, rather than all the joy being sucked out of my work by some incompetent manager.