Well, that's why this opinion is unpopular.
I saw many big applications (like ERPs) which are very slow and need very expensive resources for very small results. If their authors (who are pretty big companies) would aproach microservices the performance of the applications would be more than better. Indeed this need a very good and clear software architecture and a biger team (team who usually exist, or can be easy extended).
I guess an important point is chosing technologies because implementing microservices, for example, in Go is much easier than on a LAMP stack. So, i know that adopting newest technologies can be sometimes descouraging but using right tools microservices can be easier than seems not only for the biggest companies.
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Well, that's why this opinion is unpopular.
I saw many big applications (like ERPs) which are very slow and need very expensive resources for very small results. If their authors (who are pretty big companies) would aproach microservices the performance of the applications would be more than better. Indeed this need a very good and clear software architecture and a biger team (team who usually exist, or can be easy extended).
I guess an important point is chosing technologies because implementing microservices, for example, in Go is much easier than on a LAMP stack. So, i know that adopting newest technologies can be sometimes descouraging but using right tools microservices can be easier than seems not only for the biggest companies.