i've never used kubernetes or related 'microservices' tech in a high use environment, so just have no practical experience with microservices, unless you could EJBs?
i can imagine troubleshooting a microservices environment could get hairy, but i've had non-microservices environments get hairy, so...
I'm not sure why anyone thought this was a good idea in the first place. I always saw it as a manifestation of Conway's law [0] driven from money printing.
That is, more money -> higher demand for employees -> employees that shouldn't be given authority are -> "I want to code only in <techx that no one uses> -> microservices are the only way I can do this -> microservices are good.
and i'm here for it.
but one part i'm confused about is:
i've never used kubernetes or related 'microservices' tech in a high use environment, so just have no practical experience with microservices, unless you could EJBs?i can imagine troubleshooting a microservices environment could get hairy, but i've had non-microservices environments get hairy, so...