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pbbakkum | 10 years ago

To be more explicit on this point - I think Azure is a good product and the growth that Microsoft is seeing speaks for itself. However, for our use case, which is at least somewhat representative of a rapidly growing Linux-based startup, we didn't see any compelling advantage in using the Azure compute product (we may use one of their ML products in the future). Hence, it made sense to narrow the focus somewhat to what we thought were the best options. We eliminated Azure from our list based on the fact that our preliminary analysis didn't uncover any big advantages to use it over the other clouds, we wanted a cloud focused more on linux, and we don't currently use any products in the Microsoft ecosystem.

Yes I know Azure runs Linux, let me unpack that point: We had run previously on a cloud that wasn't focused on Linux hosting as their flagship OS. The effect we observed was that Linux was a second-class citizen in terms of features and performance. Perhaps its unfair to project that onto Azure, but I think its true that AWS and GCP think about Linux first, and Azure doesn't. Running a company on the cloud means relying on the compute product (GCE/EC2) as the foundation for your infrastructure, so we think this makes a difference.

It would be valuable for a lot of people to see more comprehensive stats across all clouds - I would love to see this personally and I think it would help people make better decisions about cloud infrastructure.

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