What’s up with all of the multi-platform outages lately? Seems abnormal looking at historical data. Are there issues affecting the internet backbone or something? Or just a coincidence?
Important to keep in mind that AWS has 250 services in 84 Availability Zones in 26 regions.
This outage is reportedly impacting 5 services in 1 region.
For those impacted, pretty terrible. But as a heavy user of AWS, I’ve seen these notices posted multiple times on HN and haven’t been impacted by one yet.
For businesses with uptime guarantees and lots of boxes to spin up in failover scenario, this has been a very eventful 12 months. At least that's what I'm experiencing.
Probably increased salary and switch to permanent remote. Amazon is notorious for their frugality and they recently doubled their maximum salary cap to 350k. They would only have done this to stay competitive in the current job market. This implies that many of their existing employees are underpaid relative to their peers at comparable companies and they've likely seen a large uptick in attrition. Not to mention attrition begets more attrition, especially if it's "influential" employees who are leaving.
It’s just a little amazing to imagine that people doing the same work in different places of the country have such huge gaps in salary caps. I think the national average for a high-level software engineer is less than $150k per year.
Things are bigger anywhere. My colleagues and I thought we’re hot shit managing 5-7k applications and infrastructure. Amazon probably runs 20,000 orgs like mine.
Also, times are good and rates are crazy. Even at VARs, you can make a lot of cash. I have a buddy who went from $150k to $600k. The guy paid off his mortgage and is at a point where he could burn out and work at Home Depot if he needed to.