cover of episode Episode 36: I'm Not Here to Correct Your English, Just Cloud Bills

Episode 36: I'm Not Here to Correct Your English, Just Cloud Bills

2018/11/14
logo of podcast Screaming in the Cloud

Screaming in the Cloud

Frequently requested episodes will be transcribed first

Shownotes Transcript

Do you enjoy watching sports? Wear your favorite team or player’s jersey? Are you a fan who has shopped at Fanatics on the Cloud?

Today, we’re talking to Johnny Sheeley, director of Cloud engineering at Fanatics, which is a sports eCommerce business that manufactures and sells sports apparel. Fanatics runs Cloud engineering to provide a robust and reliable set of services by building and deploying applications on top of the Azure Data Lake Store (ADLS) platform.

Some of the highlights of the show include:

  • If you compete with Amazon, be ready for it to come after you; some companies avoid its Cloud perspective or go multi-Cloud (paranoia-based movement)

  • Focus on your ability to make your business function smoothly

  • Transition, migration, and abstraction may be painful, but should not stop work; paying for Cloud-agnostic technology may not be worth it

  • Challenges of governing use of Cloud resources to prevent mistakes/problems related to Fanatics’ security and budget

  • Data collected focuses on what’s trending up or down to select an instance type that calculates costs; remain flexible and be aware of what you pay

  • Natural instinct is to blame people; mistakes are made, especially when a human factor is introduced to an automated system

  • Creating a mindset that focuses on feature and detail-oriented is challenging

  • Cottage industry of code bases running in Big Data and other expensive realms

  • As a product continues to evolve and grow, governance comes along for the ride and AWS bills are streamlined

  • Will serverless, Lambda, and RDS change how Amazon charges in the future?

  • State of scale of AWS and developing a more palatable method for releases because people can’t keep up with them and stop paying attention

  • Two-Pizza Team: Amazon’s management philosophy that any team that works on a service should be able to be fed with two pizzas

  • Such small teams work quickly and have the freedom to fail, but Amazon has a reliability for the longevity of its different services

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