when they're plotting %azure vs %aws, they should really be using the same range for both axes. then they could get rid of the dashed line that shows what the ratio is.
As a related side note, I sent a support request to Vultr twice in the last week and both times I got a response within 5 minutes. All follow up responses for both those tickets were also within a few minutes.
Their uptime has been rock solid and performance consistently great for the 2 years I've been with them.
I dare say most projects (even moderately big ones) would do just fine without the mega cloud.
My website was on the news a couple of days ago and was doing 2200 concurrent users for a while without breaking a sweat. Cheap hardware. Server-side rendering. Multiple database calls per user to 2 different database clusters.
That's alright if EC2 is all you were using. Past a certain point though, it usually makes sense to begin using managed services like S3, BigQuery, lambda, etc.
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[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 34.2 ms ] threadTheir uptime has been rock solid and performance consistently great for the 2 years I've been with them.
I dare say most projects (even moderately big ones) would do just fine without the mega cloud.
2200 concurrent users reading a static HTML page is not the same as 2200 concurrent users trying to make a plane reservation.
This is the site: https://pricehipster.com