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Issue 147 — December 20, 2017
Welcome
2017 is almost over and it's been a year packed with interesting ops stories, new tools, and advancements. In this issue, we're looking back at the most popular items and tools of the year, in case you missed any issues.
We're taking a break for Christmas, and will be back on January 10 with, fingers crossed, a new design :-) We hope you have a great holiday season!
Are REST-ish APIs ‘good enough’ for now? This provoked some Hacker News discussion and is a topic that we suspect will become more significant in 2018.
Daniel Ellis, an engineer at Reddit, shares a lot of details about how Reddit’s caching infrastructure works. It’s great to see real world details of this nature.
Outsourcing infrastructure is so easy and instant now, it’s easy to run up huge monthly bills when scaling. Here’s how one startup scaled its AWS costs down $1M per year.
Chopping a monolith up into microservices is increasingly common, but this article explores an alternative which promises less operational complexity: modular app development.
With HTTP/2 in every browser, load balancing with automatic failover, IPv6, a sorry page, separate blog server (using proxying), HTML5 SSE and an A+ SSL Labs rating.
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