Originally posted by tomtomagain
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The problem I see here is if my 25 lines of C# code require hardware calls then what runs on x86_64 won't run on ARM64 so I still need to know the hardware I'm running on. Maybe I'll ring up someone who hosts serverless systems and say I have some code I want to run and then try to deploy some APL, I mean it doesn't matter what hardware does it, it just deploys...“Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.” -
Serverless providers tell you in advance which stack and what version they support. E.g.Originally posted by darmstadt View PostThe problem I see here is if my 25 lines of C# code require hardware calls then what runs on x86_64 won't run on ARM64 so I still need to know the hardware I'm running on. Maybe I'll ring up someone who hosts serverless systems and say I have some code I want to run and then try to deploy some APL, I mean it doesn't matter what hardware does it, it just deploys...
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-gb/azure/azure-functions/
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/lambda/l...-model-v2.html
https://cloud.google.com/functions/You're awesome! Get yourself a t-shirt.Comment
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So you're still coding for a specific hardware stack which means you know the hardware so not really serverless...Originally posted by squarepeg View PostServerless providers tell you in advance which stack and what version they support. E.g.
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-gb/azure/azure-functions/
https://docs.aws.amazon.com/lambda/l...-model-v2.html
https://cloud.google.com/functions/“Brexit is having a wee in the middle of the room at a house party because nobody is talking to you, and then complaining about the smell.”Comment
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This line of argument is stupid; if you're using a specific instruction set, a generic runtime isn't for you; depending on the language you could always toggle syscalls / specific ASM instructions depending on architecture.Originally posted by darmstadt View PostThe problem I see here is if my 25 lines of C# code require hardware calls then what runs on x86_64 won't run on ARM64 so I still need to know the hardware I'm running on. Maybe I'll ring up someone who hosts serverless systems and say I have some code I want to run and then try to deploy some APL, I mean it doesn't matter what hardware does it, it just deploys...
That said... I'm not actually a big fan of serverless - from my experience with AWS Lambda you're just tying yourself into another vendor in most cases, by virtue of gluing together your Lambdas / state machines (step functions) using proprietary AWS infra - Kinesis, SQS, DynamoDB events. This stuff will be the Oracle legacy systems of the future.Comment
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^This. Current cluster**** I'm working on is implemented using all this proprietary Amazon guff. If Amazon hike the prices or pull the services, the client will be up tulip Creek without a system.Originally posted by TheGreenBastard View PostThis line of argument is stupid; if you're using a specific instruction set, a generic runtime isn't for you; depending on the language you could always toggle syscalls / specific ASM instructions depending on architecture.
That said... I'm not actually a big fan of serverless - from my experience with AWS Lambda you're just tying yourself into another vendor in most cases, by virtue of gluing together your Lambdas / state machines (step functions) using proprietary AWS infra - Kinesis, SQS, DynamoDB events. This stuff will be the Oracle legacy systems of the future.Comment
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And this: And to think, the mongs in charge of making these decisions think everything will be alright. I'm sort of wondering, how everyone is going to prove themselves inside EU GDPR. They don't have a fooking clue where their data is, or who is looking after it.Originally posted by DimPrawn View Post^This. Current cluster**** I'm working on is implemented using all this proprietary Amazon guff. If Amazon hike the prices or pull the services, the client will be up tulip Creek without a system.His heart is in the right place - shame we can't say the same about his brain...Comment
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That's where Microsoft beat Amazon (and Google). Azure might cost a little more but you know where the data is (roughly anyway by geographic area).Originally posted by Mordac View PostI'm sort of wondering, how everyone is going to prove themselves inside EU GDPR. They don't have a fooking clue where their data is, or who is looking after it.See You Next TuesdayComment
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Same with Amazon and Google cloud... you know which geo region your data sits in.Originally posted by Lance View PostThat's where Microsoft beat Amazon (and Google). Azure might cost a little more but you know where the data is (roughly anyway by geographic area).You're awesome! Get yourself a t-shirt.Comment
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