Posts
2020
Shift-Left Operations in the Cloud versus the Datacenter
·1109 words·6 mins
Cloud
Operations
Do you run or walk? When you do, is it on a treadmill or in the street? And why does this have anything to do with cloud and datacenter operations? Surprisingly, they have more in common than might be thought. So I am asking for a few paragraphs of leeway here.
2017
Blog Stats
·724 words·4 mins
Blogging
S3Stat
Statistics
Back in December I moved my blog to Hugo running AWS S3 , and of course I blogged about in Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes. After that move, I lost some of the visibility into my blogs operations that Azure provided. Worse, I did not have enough visbility into my blogs costs. Not that it is running that expensive, but even after tagging my resources, customizing my reports, I really didn't have the transparency I wanted.
2016
Ch-Ch-Ch-Changes
·416 words·2 mins
Blogging
Hugo
AWS
Azure
Jekyll
My blog has changed again, in two different ways. First, I have moved from Jekyll to Hugo. Second, I have moved my blog from Azure to AWS. So why the changes?
Azure to AWS # Let me start with why I am changing cloud providers. A couple of simple reasons. In fact, they are the most basic of reasons: cost and convenience. I have had a very hard time getting an accurate cost for Azure. I have had months at $5.00, and others almost as high as $13. The price itself isn’t issue. It is the inability to predict the price from month to month with some levels of accuracy. I can always get to the details, but it takes digging. It is just not intuitive.
2015
Goodbye Walmart
·940 words·5 mins
Walmart
Amazon
BestBuy
Target
Shopping
I am saying goodbye to Walmart. After years of being a customer, our time together has finally reached the end of the road. Not over some major issue, but over the very basics of customer relations.
Switching from WordPress to Jekyll
·1412 words·7 mins
Blogging
Jekyll
WordPress
Ten years ago, May 14 2005 specifically, I started this blog on the WordPress platform. I chose WordPress for a number of reasons, but the primary reasons were that it was simple - really simple - for me to get up an going and that the hosting providers I was considering supported it. I wanted to use the web, but not actually develop for the web. WordPress seemed like the right choice. I did consider other options, and every few years, I would look around at what else was available. I have played with Drupal, Joomla, DasBlog, and others I can’t remember. In the end, I always ended up back on WordPress. Why - simplicity. It did what I wanted.