A huge portion of AWS services are really annoying in my opinion to grassroots developers and platform managers because they are basically executive demoware.
You know the kind where the salesman comes in and in front of the CIO builds some whiz-bang demo and like 20 minutes and has a CEO asking why it takes a month or more to do equivalent stuff by real it workers.
And sometimes it's worse to customize the out-of-the-box solution than just creating your own solution. For some AWS products, it's pure pain to get it up and running in the configuration you require. There are edge cases and bugs to worry about.
That whiz-bang demo? Maybe that's the only functionality that works right. Maybe it's all using default values that won't pass your internal security and compliance policies.
And lets not forget the pain of integrating something new with existing systems. It's easy to show a demo of something that doesn't integrate with existing systems, and just show a slide or two of what things it integrates with.
If you get rid of chime you also get rid of slack huddles (built on Chime). Like many AWS services the backend of Chime is good, the UX/UI is terrible.
AtlasBarfed|1 year ago
You know the kind where the salesman comes in and in front of the CIO builds some whiz-bang demo and like 20 minutes and has a CEO asking why it takes a month or more to do equivalent stuff by real it workers.
justin_oaks|1 year ago
That whiz-bang demo? Maybe that's the only functionality that works right. Maybe it's all using default values that won't pass your internal security and compliance policies.
And lets not forget the pain of integrating something new with existing systems. It's easy to show a demo of something that doesn't integrate with existing systems, and just show a slide or two of what things it integrates with.
toomuchtodo|1 year ago
__float|1 year ago
As a product, it seems fine. I'm not entirely sure it's an area AWS really needed to have a competitor, but now that they do, /shrug
JustinGarrison|1 year ago