On Fri, Dec 14, 2012 at 03:24:03PM +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > 
> > Doesn't a good cloud server also have potentially higher availability
> > compared to dedicated?
> 
> Potentially? Yes.
> 
> In reality? No.
> 
> It's not the virtualization that breaks, it's all the surrounding
> infrastructure, especially Layer 2. You will not believe how fragile
> that stuff can get.
> 
> In the old days, a small slip up could isolate a small part of the
> network. These days, a small slip-up easily ripples though the entire
> network and takes down all of it, and sadly this is not rare. The
> networking needs of VMs are radically different from the traditional,
> and this is the side-effect: fragility.

And it happens *every* day, all over the place.

Yesterday I went to Coburn's Supply to get a box of air filters for our HVAC
units. They "couldn't get in". One guy says, "I'm on the internet, don't know
what's wrong". The other guy says, "It's _them_ ..." So they couldn't even
tell me the price of the filters, or if they had them. So one guy walks in the
back and does it the "old fashioned way" -- he just looks. (Reminds me a bit
of sneakernet.) By the time he gets back, and tries again, "Hey, it's working
now ... quick!"

Welcome to the cloud. Your packet has reached critical mass. Please reboot.
-- 
Happy Penguin Computers               >')
126 Fenco Drive                       ( \
Tupelo, MS 38801                       ^^
supp...@happypenguincomputers.com
662-269-2706 662-205-6424
http://happypenguincomputers.com/

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