upvote
“Cloud-native natives” had so much free plans that had no need to understand what a basic app really needs.
reply
Apparently the phrase cargo cult software engineering is not common anymore. Explains these things perfectly.
reply
I end up explaining this term to every junior developer that doesn't know it sooner or later, the same way I explain bike shedding to all PMs that don't know it... often sooner, rather than later.

It seems to really help if you can put a term to it.

reply
Heh, I was gonna say cargo cult might mean something different in today’s programming landscape but then I thought about it for a second and it actually reinforces th meaning.
reply
I don't know what to say. People keep saying these engineers exist and here I am not having seen a single, and I follow many indie hackers communities.
reply
A devops coworker found my blog and asked me how I host it, is it Kubernetes. I told him it's a dedicated server and he seemed amazed. And this was just a blog. It's real
reply
Does your coworker run a blog on k8s?
reply
None of them self host anything at all. It's like that skill was totally skipped. But they advise and consult on infra
reply
Well, by the time you are hiring a dedicated infra role, you should be past the single VPS stage.
reply
Hard disagree. You can have incredibly complex infrastructure (whose maintenance necessitates an FTE) running on a single VPS. Some of the smartest infra consultants I've met have point blank said "you shouldn't implement a fleet of cloud microservices for that, I can implement this whole stack on a single machine if I'm efficient about the architecture and underlying algorithms."
reply
My point is that none of these coworkers have ever been at that stage. He was surprised about me hosting something because he seems to think hosting is expensive and for companies. Straight in at the top end of k8s and microservices
reply
Because I think precisely the indie hacker community is not as keen to default to the big-tech stacks, because those are neither indie, nor hack-y :)
reply