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throwaway7281 | 5 years ago

To put it into perspective: You give me $72K and I'll set you up a 1PB replicated storage infra with a total of 100+ available CPU cores and half a TB RAM.

I saw people burning through cash in the cloud, which makes you wonder weather money is any concern at all.

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LeonM|5 years ago

You forget your own cost here.

A full-time system administrator costs more than 72k a year.

rndgermandude|5 years ago

Learning/Administering AWS/GCP/Azure costs time and therefore money too. Maybe less money, maybe more money than doing things yourself, depending on what you're doing. But you shouldn't disregard such costs.

I've seen enough buddies spending enormous amounts of time doing AWS devops on top of paying the AWS premium when they could have gotten away easily with a less than a handful of VPS (+ optionally $100/month worth of cloudflare as a CDN).

walrus01|5 years ago

Once an organization reaches a certain size it will need one, who ideally should be a person that can wear the dual hats of linux/bsd sysadmin and also network engineer.

If the person is already on payroll doing a number of other duties, the time/effort to set up such an environment as described in the post could be as short as a couple of days work.

nlitened|5 years ago

Yeah, but the absence of system administrator has just cost these guys 72k for several hours.

zigzag312|5 years ago

Why full-time? It's possible to outsource IT administration to a local IT company and pay only for set-up and maintenance that is needed. Way less than 72k a year for many use cases.

Also, companies that employ bunch of developers can find a developer that has IT administration expertise and allocate some of his time to this. Still cheaper than 72k a year or employing someone full-time, if IT requirements don't call for full time job.

It's not just cloud vs full-time.

jcelerier|5 years ago

Aha what ? Where I live (Bordeaux, France) a quick glance through the job offers for full-time sysadmin are between 25 and 35k€ / year

gruturo|5 years ago

And for half the use cases you still need one. Unless you go full SaaS (which may or may not be an option depending what you are doing, and what's on offer in that field), you still get stuff which needs to be administered, updated, patched, etc. Maybe not the OS layer (or maybe even that), maybe not the DB (but then it might cost more), but you're not getting away from that.

You only really start saving at some scale (get a small core of cloud-literate admins, and now you can have them run thousands of systems for effectively no incremental cost)

raverbashing|5 years ago

Which is moot if you're just going to burn the 72k by shooting yourself in the foot.

And the way these cloud services go, the 72k was only detected because it was an one-off event. Turn that into a base-level inefficiency that costs that over a year and what have you then.

donmcronald|5 years ago

I wonder what a full time cloud engineer costs. IMO it’s trading a simple system for a complex system, so now the maintainers cost even more than sysadmins used to.

iooi|5 years ago

Because electricity is free. And internet is also free. And the rooms to put the servers are also free. A/C is free. And backup generators are free. And diesel is free.

ludocode|5 years ago

You can rent a full 42U rack in a colocation center for ~$1500/mo easily. They'll handle all of that stuff, including redundant power and redundant internet.

Of course self-hosting on real hardware is not quite as simple or cheap as GP made it out to be. But everything in your post can be solved with simple fixed pricing, which is still the main point: there are no dangers of wildly variable pricing or accidental massive bills as there are with cloud hosting providers.

throwaway7281|5 years ago

I was stretching the point, but what amazes me is the amount of stuff people want to do vs. the amount of equipment they throw at the problem.

walrus01|5 years ago

only a half TB of RAM? somebody recently gave me a free 4U server with 256GB of RAM in it. for zero dollars.

If you need a number or xen or kvm VMs with a lot of RAM assigned to each one for testing something, you can fairly easily set up an older Dell R910 (quad-socket system) with 512GB of RAM for under $2000.