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All I'm saying is that people mention HA, when there isn't a need for it or when most people are fine with some downtime. For example,

> When AWS/GCP goes down, how do most handle HA?

When they go down, what do most do? Honestly, people still go about their day and are okay. Look how many systems do go down. What ends up happening? An article goes out that X cloud took out large parts of the internet.. and that's it.

Even when there's ways of doing it, they just go down and we accept it. I never said this doesn't go down or can't go down, it's just that it's okay and totally fine if it does.



> All I'm saying is that people mention HA, when there isn't a need for it or when most people are fine with some downtime.

I don't think it's smart to just cherry pick the design constraints you feel don't apply to you, and proceed to argue others should also ignore them.

Just because you are ok to let your pet project crash and be out for long periods of time, why do you assume it's ok for everyone to do the same?

Think about it for a second: what would be the impact of a storefront to crash during a black Friday type event? Do you think people don't get fired for dropping the ball in these circumstances? Heck, you have papers that document how a few extra milliseconds of latency in a store page is correlated to measurable drops in revenue, and here you are claiming that having businesses crash is no biggie.




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