Been using UNIX since the late 80s; Linux since the mid-90s; virtualization since the early 2000s and spent the past few years working in the cloud space.
Location
Alexandria, VA, USA
Education
B.S. Psychology from Pennsylvania State University
Feels like a "what's old is new again" proposition.
One of the biggest complaints of the groups I've helped with migration to the cloud typically included, "what do you mean I can't live-migrate my workload from a saturated vm-host to a less-busy vm-host". They were coming from VMware-based solutions, where such was sort of just a given. :p
Been using UNIX since the late 80s; Linux since the mid-90s; virtualization since the early 2000s and spent the past few years working in the cloud space.
Location
Alexandria, VA, USA
Education
B.S. Psychology from Pennsylvania State University
Feels like a "what's old is new again" proposition.
One of the biggest complaints of the groups I've helped with migration to the cloud typically included, "what do you mean I can't live-migrate my workload from a saturated vm-host to a less-busy vm-host". They were coming from VMware-based solutions, where such was sort of just a given. :p
Yes definitely, had another industry veteran making the same comment.
A part of me wonders when shared servers like PHP (maybe with JS instead?) would make a resurgence again =D
"Industry veteran": code for, "damn you're old, dude!" =)