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Whiteboard Confessional: My Metaphor-Spewing Poet Boss & Why I Don’t Like Amazon ElastiCache for Redis

Whiteboard Confessional: My Metaphor-Spewing Poet Boss & Why I Don’t Like Amazon ElastiCache for Redis

FromAWS Morning Brief


Whiteboard Confessional: My Metaphor-Spewing Poet Boss & Why I Don’t Like Amazon ElastiCache for Redis

FromAWS Morning Brief

ratings:
Length:
12 minutes
Released:
Apr 3, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

About Corey QuinnOver the course of my career, I’ve worn many different hats in the tech world: systems administrator, systems engineer, director of technical operations, and director of DevOps, to name a few. Today, I’m a cloud economist at The Duckbill Group, the author of the weekly Last Week in AWS newsletter, and the host of two podcasts: Screaming in the Cloud and, you guessed it, AWS Morning Brief, which you’re about to listen to.Links
CHAOSSEARCH
Redis
Amazon ElastiCache
Twitter: @QuinnyPig
TranscriptCorey Quinn: Welcome to AWS Morning Brief: Whiteboard Confessional. I’m Cloud Economist Corey Quinn. This weekly show exposes the semi-polite lie that is whiteboard architecture diagrams. You see, a child can draw a whiteboard architecture, but the real world is a mess. We discuss the hilariously bad decisions that make it into shipping products, the unfortunate hacks the real-world forces us to build, and that the best to call your staging environment is “theory”. Because invariably whatever you’ve built works in the theory, but not in production. Let’s get to it.On this show, I talk an awful lot about architectural patterns that are horrifying. Let’s instead talk for a moment about something that isn’t horrifying. CHAOSSEARCH. Architecturally, they do things right. They provide a log analytics solution that separates out your storage from your compute. The data lives inside of your S3 buckets, and you can access it using APIs you’ve come to know and tolerate, through a series of containers that live next to that S3 storage. Rather than replicating massive clusters that you have to care and feed for yourself, instead, you now get to focus on just storing data, treating it like you normally would other S3 data and not replicating it, storing it on expensive disks in triplicate, and fundamentally not having to deal with the pains of running other log analytics infrastructure. Check them out today at CHAOSSEARCH.io.When you walk through an airport—assuming that people still go to airports in the state of pandemic in which we live—you’ll see billboards saying, “I love my slow database, says no one ever.” This is an ad for Redis. And the unspoken implication is that everyone loves Redis. I do not. In honor of the recent release of Global DataStore for Amazon ElastiCache for Redis. Today I’d like to talk about that time ElastiCache for Redis helped cause an outage that led to drama. This was a few years back and I worked at a B2B company—B2B of course, meaning business-to-business. We were not dealing direct-to-consumer—I was a different person then, and it was a different time, specifically, the time was late one Sunday evening, and my phone rang. This was atypical because most people didn’t have that phone number. At this stage of my life, my default answer when my phone rang was, “Sorry, you have the wrong number.” If I wanted phone calls, I’d have taken out a personals ad. Even worse when I answered the call, it was work. Because I ran the ops team, I was pretty judicious in turning off alerts for anything that wasn’t actively harming folks. If it wasn’t immediately actionable and causing trouble, then there was almost certainly an opportunity to be able to fix it later during business hours. So, the list of things that could wake me up was pretty small. As a result, this was the first time that I had been called out of hours during my tenure at this company, despite having spent over six months there at this point, so who could possibly be on the phone but my spineless coward of a boss? A man who spoke only in metaphor, we certainly weren’t social friends because who can be friends with a person like that?“What can I do for you?” “As the roses turn their faces to the sun, so my attention turned to a call from our CEO. There’s an incident.” My response was along the lines of, “I’m not sure what’s wrong with you, but I’m sure it’s got a long name, it is incredibly expensive to fix.” Then I hung up on him and dialed into the
Released:
Apr 3, 2020
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

The latest in AWS news, sprinkled with snark. Posts about AWS come out over sixty times a day. We filter through it all to find the hidden gems, the community contributions--the stuff worth hearing about! Then we summarize it with snark and share it with you--minus the nonsense.