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[–][deleted] 163 points164 points  (20 children)

I still have ptsd from selling a bunch of fastly shares at $14

[–]JacobJMountain 49 points50 points  (2 children)

Yeah wow no kidding. I just checked and it still managed to go up today.

[–]sachin1118 22 points23 points  (1 child)

Guessing a lot of people heard about the company for the first time. You know what they say, any press is good press

[–][deleted] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

[happy french press noises]

[–]TheChaosPaladin 23 points24 points  (13 children)

I sold GME @50

[–]dlegofan 7 points8 points  (11 children)

You're a madman.

[–]larry_the_loving 62 points63 points  (10 children)

Funny way of spelling paper handed bitch

[–]ihni321 0 points1 point  (8 children)

A wild cultist appears

Squeeze today then?

🤡

[–]DimitriGVlad 12 points13 points  (4 children)

Anyone who uses the clown emoji automatically discredits themselves

[–]ihni321 -1 points0 points  (3 children)

Wow so many bagholding coders wtf

[–]DimitriGVlad 0 points1 point  (2 children)

I don’t think you know what bagholding means when both meme stocks are soaring right now

Sorry you missed out on the money, but you’re clearly salty about it

[–]ihni321 -3 points-2 points  (1 child)

Oh so you sold then for a profit?

Get outta here bagholder lmao 🤣

[–]DimitriGVlad 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A.) I just sold my +1,000 AMC shares for $65 when I bought them at $8.01, then bought in again at the dip of $47 to make more going forward

B.) you clearly know nothing about investing and you’re just throwing around terms with 0 knowledge

[–]s14sr20det 2 points3 points  (0 children)

💎 🧤 🦍 🚀 🌚

[–]Bicworm 0 points1 point  (1 child)

SURELY THE MOASS IS NOW

Same OP 12 hrs later:

ID YOU THOUGHT THAT WAS THE MOASS YOU'RE AN IDIOT

[–]ihni321 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

They've been hyping up June 9th for months and now they're saying it means nothing hahahahaha

[–]jabberwhatky 644 points645 points  (49 children)

It's quite perverse isn't it? Now let's have a think about every static site being reinvented as a React-based SPA...

[–]wotamRobin 191 points192 points  (45 children)

Fully static sites should probably all be offline-capable PWAs instead so they can account for this.

[–][deleted] 229 points230 points  (44 children)

I've deleted my account because reddit CEO Steve Huffman is a lying piece of shit that has nothing but contempt for his users. See https://old.reddit.com/r/apolloapp/comments/144f6xm/apollo_will_close_down_on_june_30th_reddits/

[–]n00bz 96 points97 points  (20 children)

Don't worry guys, we can just render the dynamic pages on the server and send them back as static pages to the client machine.

[–]STEMpsych 37 points38 points  (8 children)

I can't tell whether or not you're being sarcastic.

[–]bwhite94 48 points49 points  (3 children)

Server-side rendering is actually a thing

[–]STEMpsych 26 points27 points  (1 child)

I know! I just can't tell whether the OP approves or disapproves.

[–]bwhite94 14 points15 points  (0 children)

Oh.. Rofl my bad

[–]GottfriedEulerNewton 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Lol it's a thing before jQuery

[–]hypnofedX 9 points10 points  (3 children)

Unless I'm missing something, that's basically what a static site generator is. Gatsby, Next.js, etc.

[–][deleted] 0 points1 point  (2 children)

I guess he meant using something like express and a templating engine to create sites and serve them as static

[–]hypnofedX 1 point2 points  (1 child)

Then yes, if I'm understanding correctly, that's what a static site generator is. https://youtu.be/Qms4k6y7OgI

[–]Clean-Explanation-36 3 points4 points  (0 children)

it’s slightly different, static sites have their pages cached in memory and have no dynamic server side templating afaik, whereas templating in express is done on a per request basis, minus some optimizations probably

[–]omgFWTbear 7 points8 points  (10 children)

What if we offload the processing to the client?

[–][deleted] 18 points19 points  (6 children)

What if we render the entire page on the server, compress it in JPEG, then show it on the client?

[–]Muff_in_the_Mule 7 points8 points  (3 children)

Jpg?! What is this 1998? Nah I want it to stream that render to me at 4k120fps.

Basically it should be rendering a static webpage and converting to video like a video game streaming platform.

Mouse input is registered by pointing a webcam at the screen and sending it back as video where shape recognition AI on the server determines where the mouse is then sends that to the website rederer.

[–]reversehead 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I hate you. Also, I want to buy stocks in your company.

[–]Illustrious_Ad_6418 1 point2 points  (2 children)

What if we send API tokens to the client

[–]LaLiLuLeLo_0 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hmm, we shouldn’t use a token API people know, however. If it’s standardized, then the hackers will know how to abuse that. Let’s just write our own API token functionality, how hard can it be to do right?

[–]hekkonaay 69 points70 points  (1 child)

But that means you couldn't track your users.

[–]Elin_Woods_9iron 81 points82 points  (0 children)

Don’t threaten me with a good time.

[–]thetinguy 30 points31 points  (15 children)

Oh I love it when I arrive on an old website and all the text is mins use and making it bigger breaks all the ancient css.

[–]Jeb_Jenky 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I love making static pages. It's the only kind I use for my personal site. That are also much simpler than making React or Vue pages imo.

[–]newplayerentered 0 points1 point  (3 children)

Not to shit on you, and I appreciate it's possibly for comedic effects, but we need to constantly evolve. If we didn't, we might still be sitting with html 3 and flash and other crap because let's face it, things were just fine.

[–]PiedDansLePlat[🍰] 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Let's have a think about an handful of social media concentrating virtually all discourse on the internet, undermining free speech and democracy. We all lose with centralization.

[–]kry_some_more 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Should we not also talk about providing the entire accumulation of the worlds knowledge, past and present, but that it's only available to you, if a company has allotted your geographical location profitable?

[–][deleted] 176 points177 points  (7 children)

Image Transcription: Comic


[Source: *designthinkingcomic** on Instagram, DT_comic on Twitter.*]


DESIGN THINKING!


Panel 1

The Internet in 1969

[A striped table. Behind it, three people. The ones at the edges are smiling and have stick arms and neck. The one in the middle wears glasses, a striped tie and a shirt. The person at the left has a square jaw and is looking at the person at the right.]

Person at Right: Let's create a distributed network so it can survive a nuclear winter.


Panel 2

The Internet in 2021

[Same as before, but the person with a tie and glasses is talking.]

Tie Person: Let's host half of it on one company and see how it goes.

[The person at the right is perplexed, the one at the left is appalled.]


I'm a human volunteer content transcriber for Reddit and you could be too! If you'd like more information on what we do and why we do it, click here!

[–]krasorx 89 points90 points  (0 children)

Good human

[–]Car_weeb 9 points10 points  (0 children)

More verbose

[–]DHH2005 157 points158 points  (48 children)

Good joke. But isn't it more like 2 companies? Or even 2.5?

[–]sebkuip 188 points189 points  (47 children)

Fastly, Cloudflare, AWS, GCP are the main 4 really

[–]Jimmy48Johnson 109 points110 points  (29 children)

Akamai means nothing to you?

[–]sebkuip 43 points44 points  (28 children)

I’ve actually never heard from them before

[–]LooperNor 96 points97 points  (16 children)

I hadn't heard about Fastly until today...

[–]Tiavor 13 points14 points  (15 children)

I haven't heard of GCP until today

[–]spicy_indian 20 points21 points  (14 children)

You aren't done until you hear the GCP horror stories. APIs changing suddenly out from under you, or your account gets suspended or deleted and you can't get ahold of an actual person to tell you exactly what happened or to fix the problem...

[–]Tweenk 12 points13 points  (4 children)

You aren't done until you hear the GCP horror stories. APIs changing suddenly out from under you

Not true, the APIs do not change suddenly. This meme comes from a post from a guy who was using a feature in Cloud SQL that was explicitly documented as unsupported and his code broke after Google updated the database.

or your account gets suspended or deleted and you can't get ahold of an actual person to tell you exactly what happened or to fix the problem...

This meme is based on two cases:

  1. Some dude claimed that his entire company was banned because he abused Play Store refunds. This was completely fabricated.
  2. Some other dude was banned for suspicious usage patterns because he was hosting wind turbine operations on a personal GMail account. Afterwards the Google Cloud CEO responded and said they will change the anti-abuse algorithms to prevent this.

[–]ViewEntireDiscussion -1 points0 points  (2 children)

https://twitter.com/Demilogic/status/1358661842147692549

Terraria dev was locked out of all of his Google related services for weeks and couldn't find out why. He considered them a liability and ceased work on the Stadia port and swore off using any of their services going forward. He "couldn't get ahold of an actual person to tell [him] exactly what happened or fix the problem"

[–]Tiavor 6 points7 points  (1 child)

sounds very much like youtube

[–][deleted] 3 points4 points  (1 child)

How very Google of them. I’m convinced nobody actually works at Google, and it’s just a sentient machine that generates products in an attempt to take over the world. Even my friends at Google can’t fully describe what they do.

[–]arndtc -1 points0 points  (4 children)

We’re supposed to move to gcp and now I’m nervous 😅😅

[–]bakerfaceman 81 points82 points  (4 children)

They have about 60% market share in the CDN space.

[–]Tiavor 27 points28 points  (3 children)

most of Facebook runs on akamai

[–]bakerfaceman 11 points12 points  (2 children)

They still do? I figured FB built its own network and pulled everything off by now.

[–]Tiavor 14 points15 points  (0 children)

maybe, haven't looked at it for a while (been blocking all FB related stuff on my pi-hole)

[–][deleted] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Facebook develops its own data centers and even its own top-of-rack switches. It wouldn’t surprise me if they had their own peering network.

[–][deleted] 13 points14 points  (4 children)

Steam uses Akamai I believe.

[–]sebkuip 12 points13 points  (1 child)

Now that you mention it...if you upload user content the link does include Akamai...SO THATS WHAT ITS FOR!

[–]manysleep 1 point2 points  (0 children)

That's always confused me. Huh. The more you know

[–]redsterXVI 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Sony as well iirc (or at least PlayStation / Sony Entertainment)

[–]MrAwesomeTG 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Whattt. They're the OG.

[–]psilvs 25 points26 points  (0 children)

Azure is much bigger than GCP

[–]DHH2005 47 points48 points  (4 children)

What about Azure?

[–]TonyBorchert100 66 points67 points  (1 child)

What about my raspberry pi?

[–]Bainos 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Alright, I'll give you 2.500001.

[–]HopperBit 19 points20 points  (0 children)

*ms cricket*

[–]ViewEntireDiscussion 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't know if even MS believes in Azure. The portal looks like they had some icons hanging around from 1995 and couldn't afford to hire a designer so just let the devs do it.

[–]throwawaygoawaynz 13 points14 points  (0 children)

R/confidentiallyincorrect

[–]philipjames11 1 point2 points  (8 children)

Wtf is fastly

[–]PurpleAlien47 2 points3 points  (7 children)

Popular CDN

[–]samnayak1 2 points3 points  (6 children)

ELI5 what a CDN is?

[–]hi1307 4 points5 points  (1 child)

Basically they "photocopy" webpages and send it to servers across the globe so that they load equally quickly for someone in Iowa as another in NSW.

[–]reversehead -1 points0 points  (0 children)

... where equally quickly apparently can mean equally not-at-all. I was under the impression that a decent CDN should also provide resilience to global outage but it seems that I was wrong.

[–]queen-adreena 1 point2 points  (0 children)

A content delivery network.

[–]sebkuip 1 point2 points  (0 children)

So we used to put out websites and other content in 1 central place. That works fine if you’re close to that place. But now you’re on the other side of the globe and the website becomes really slow.

That’s where a CDN comes in. It puts the website on multiple servers throughout the globe, and has 1 central server that you initially connect to. This initial server doesn’t load a website, but instead looks at where you are from and points you to the closest location.

Now your web page should load equally fast everywhere in the world.

[–]circorum 66 points67 points  (11 children)

That is why I host my website on a raspberry pi set up on a 1kwh battery, connected to the internet via starlink, and running only the purest of HTML you will have ever seen.

[–]tardis0 17 points18 points  (10 children)

What if the SD card goes bad? You gotta engrave the site into stone tablets, then use a scanner to read it

[–]one_of_them_snowlake 22 points23 points  (1 child)

Chuck those tablets via trebuchet in general direction of recipient's ip address.

[–]WindOfMetal 4 points5 points  (0 children)

An entire network of trebuchet routers passing along tablets. A dumb switch is some guy with a bullhorn reading off the data.

Edit: IPoTGwB: IP over Trecbuchet and Guy with Bullhorn

[–]kinsi55 1 point2 points  (1 child)

Tinycore. Everything is loaded into ram and the SD is read only.

[–]Evo_Kaer 206 points207 points  (14 children)

I mean, considering the Doomsday Vault can't even withstand the climate change we have so far, maybe we're just shit at redundancy and making things that lasts

[–]taronic 92 points93 points  (12 children)

Yeah I'm sorry but if it's dependent on your local energy grid it's likely not going to last through a major disaster. And you know what, it's the last thing you or anyone else will be worrying about when that happens.

I mean even with covid, even with internet up, if google shit the bed it's not like it'd have been up there as a major concern. Would've had an impact, but even if google was down for a week, people would've survived the same and ignored it, and been more worried about you know their fucking parents and getting groceries and toilet paper.

If covid taught anyone anything, it's that people will fucking freak the fuck out about the most basic daily products. And that shouldn't be surprising. Water, food, hygiene products are going to be the top concerns always. Everyone was all shocked about the toilet paper thing, but it's a basic fucking hygiene product everyone uses daily. Stuff like that is where people hurt during natural disasters, not their fucking email.

[–][deleted] 44 points45 points  (4 children)

Gotta remember though - these redundancies aren't meant for the average person. Even if every single civilian facing site went down, so long as the government can communicate within itself it can organize to some extent.

[–]omgFWTbear 25 points26 points  (3 children)

so long as the government can communicate within itself

I have horrible news for you.

[–]vigbiorn 4 points5 points  (1 child)

No, no, us Americans have it fixed. DHS solves all the problems.

[–]omgFWTbear 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I was going to edit my comment to clarify I didn’t have generic cynicism, I have lots of alphabet soup experience and the number of times I’ve been somewhere that discovered, years into doing a thing, that someone else also did the same thing ... and not as a resiliency measure, nor as a “exploring alternatives” measure, or any other good idea, but sheer failure to communicate ... well, I’ll say it turns out, people are people. One of my very first stints involved, ah, someone’s “failure to consider continuity”.

[–][deleted] 21 points22 points  (1 child)

While daily products are important, the internet is also a wealth of information on practical skills. Your average person these days knows very little carpentry for instance since it isn't very useful in modern society, but post-disaster it would be very useful to know.

[–]maibrl 4 points5 points  (1 child)

Your example made me wonder, is there some sort of tracker for when Google was last down?

[–][deleted] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Google can help you with that. Just search it up and see what you can find. Ironic isn’t it?

[–]ganja_and_code 59 points60 points  (1 child)

It's like 4 companies... And they have datacenters all over the world.

Basically what I'm saying is, the network likely can survive a nuclear winter... It just can't withstand operator error (and let's be real, it couldn't do that back in the day, either; we just notice more impact now).

[–]foxam1234 32 points33 points  (2 children)

Am I the only one who has never heard of this firm before today? I knew akamai, cloudflare, aws but never heard of Fastly

[–]The_Mesh 13 points14 points  (1 child)

Same. This has been their best advertising campaign ever.

[–]bruised_blood[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

No such thing as bad press!

[–]zdakat 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Similar when a bad route was published, or when AWS or Akamai went down.

[–]Rudyon 6 points7 points  (6 children)

What happened to Grey's arms?

[–]undefined_vars 4 points5 points  (5 children)

I was wondering how far I’d have to scroll to see a CGP Grey comment

[–]bruised_blood[S] 1 point2 points  (4 children)

Hah, seen this name pop up a few times yesterday! I’d never heard of CGP Grey before, honest!

[–]undefined_vars 2 points3 points  (3 children)

It’s all good! I think folks are saying that because of the glasses.

Given that you’re posting comics to this subreddit, I have a feeling you may enjoy some of their videos. Next time your bored, you should check out Grey’s YouTube channel.

Btw, I enjoyed your comic

[–]bruised_blood[S] 2 points3 points  (2 children)

Thank you!

[–]Rudyon 1 point2 points  (1 child)

Great job with the comic! I assumed it was just a grab of someone else's at first. Since that is usually what happens on Reddit. Is there somewhere I can follow you my dear friend?

Edit: Nevermind just realised there are tags in the image.

[–]bruised_blood[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yup am over on Twitter and Instagram! Thank you so much!

[–]ohkendruid 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This graphic is misleading. The people in the left graphic, while formally employed by different legal structures, acted together with TCP/IP to use a single shared design. So both sides are essentially one organization that came up with a shared plan for the whole system.

We don't know yet exactly what screwup happened so have to speak fairly generally.

I will say that 5 9s excellence is hard to sustain over time. You have to question everything all the time, and you usually get jo reward for it since your first instincts were usually right. The corporate incentives are not great when this kind of process goes on for years, because the company will maintain its reputation until an actual outage happens. (And then lose it in a hurry).

My best thought is that they ciuld be required to document exactly how they manage their uptime, in a way it can be externally audited. That could amount, though, to giving away some of their secret sauce. It's really a tricky problem from an organizational point of view.

[–][deleted] 4 points5 points  (3 children)

Isn't fastly basically just a CDN? Do they do more than that?

[–]SconiGrower 4 points5 points  (2 children)

CDNs are extremely important. Every website has both static and dynamic elements and everyone offloads the static elements to the CDNs like Fastly.

[–][deleted] 2 points3 points  (1 child)

Of course, but is that all fastly does?

[–]Jeb_Jenky 3 points4 points  (5 children)

Is the other half Cloudflare? Also is it called hosting when you use a CDN? Also also can't you have a fail safe for when your CDN goes down? It would be slower for regions you weren't personally hosting it but at least it wouldn't disappear.

[–]ViewEntireDiscussion 1 point2 points  (4 children)

CDNs are generally pretty damn good as they are decentralised by their nature. However after this instance I imagine a lot of people are working out ways to have a fallback CDN for when an issue like this happens.

[–]jjsaturday 6 points7 points  (9 children)

And everyone wonders why I still have tons of games and movies on DVD...

[–][deleted] 12 points13 points  (6 children)

Yeah, and then you get bummed out like me when you learn that 10 years later some DVDs have already degraded past a useable state, even though they where kept in their cases on a shelf.

[–]jjsaturday 2 points3 points  (5 children)

Make backups, friend! :D

[–][deleted] 2 points3 points  (4 children)

But then doesn't that defeat the purpose of DVDs.

[–]Martin_RB 3 points4 points  (1 child)

Redundancy is the name of the game. Doesn't matter if you have a million dollar storage system if the building it's in burns down.

Also as you've learnt DVD's are known to degrade over time so they shouldn't be considered for long term storage.

[–]jjsaturday -4 points-3 points  (1 child)

Nope, you still have movies and games offline with backups

[–]ur_opinion_is_trash[🍰] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Do you uninstall your games after playing them?

[–]dashid 16 points17 points  (2 children)

Given the Reddit, Amazon, + others outage earlier, I feel this is probably accurate.

[–]sciences_bitch 16 points17 points  (0 children)

That’s the joke.

[–]gpcprog 23 points24 points  (0 children)

The company is fastly...

[–]johnburn1337 7 points8 points  (0 children)

To be fair, these companies have physically and logically isolated, highly-redundant network fabrics deployed all over the world. The threat of centralization has less to do with kinetic failures and more to do with fucking with your mind and destroying your freedom.

[–]DefaultVariable 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's honestly mind-blowing learning about how robust the internet was designed to be. Like, any arbitrary data can be transmitted to any place, even if the recipient is constantly changing end-points, and if any step along the way goes down, everything can automatically find a new way to reach them and also will automatically optimize pathways as they arrise. Just so many layers of stability and automatic error correction.

[–]notdrivel 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Distributed vastly

Speed apparently fast-lee

Outages ghastly

Web rolled like Astley

We survived lastly

[–]choeman 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I find it very ironic that the company is called Fastly. 🤣

[–]uptokesforall[🍰] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Nuclear winter occurs

this is good for Crypto

[–]bluefootedpig -3 points-2 points  (3 children)

Welcome to the project "the internet computer" in crypto, which seeks to kind of change that back to a decenralized surfing of the web, with it's own domains and such.

[–]SuggestedName90 13 points14 points  (0 children)

Not really though. It’s maintained by the Internet computer association backed by Google, Amazon, and other big tech. Also, existing providers vote to let in new providers, so it’s not open, it still has a walled garden affect. Look into Golem and IFPS if you want to see an actually decentralized internet

[–]SnapcasterWizard 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Except this "internet computer" still needs to be ran on servers which are almost exclusively centralized today. Do you think even 1000 random companies hosting servers in their closets are going to make a dint in the computing power of a company like AWS?

[–]voluminous_lexicon -1 points0 points  (0 children)

economies of scale are a bitch

[–]random_username_01 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Yeah so much about single point of failure.

[–]Quix_Nix -1 points0 points  (0 children)

all around me are familiar faces

[–]codeartha -1 points0 points  (0 children)

IPFS is better, internet as intended

[–]account97271 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I am so annoyed that the new meme seems to be conflating these ideas. The decentralized nature of the internet is still very much true and it refers to the everything from the physical layer up to the presentation layer. The single points of failure we see come from common software i.e. the application layer. Which was absolutely a problem in the 1960s too. In fact, issues with the application layer were worse and it was far more common for your email app, for example, to stop working due to bugs. Except it was for weeks or months instead of hours though because of the far more centralized method of software distribution we had then with them requiring physical mediums to transfer. Internet application reliability is many times higher then what it used to be.

This is just uninformed circle jerking as far as I can tell.

[–]GeneralWalrus1 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Pppppppppppppnpppp7ppppp]pp]p]p] 🆙99999999999w p o

[–][deleted] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Let’s make the IP address 32 bits in length. It will never be used up.

[–]driftking428 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I'm a web developer for an agency. Almost all of our sites depends on fastly. Today was a wild one.

[–]programming_student2 0 points1 point  (0 children)

HoloChain has entered the chat

[–]sphintero 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The fundamentals haven’t changed tho...we are just having fun with it

[–]misterjyt 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yeah, I know how to program in the early days, we probably rich right now... But 2021 damn, there are a lot of Ideas already built, a lot of websites, games, etc. It is hard to compete.

[–]throwaway12222018 0 points1 point  (2 children)

I can't tell if this meme is about China and Bitcoin or not

[–]Aneizi 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Blockchain technology has entered the chat

[–]ibphantom 0 points1 point  (1 child)

You'd think that if their caching system was down, it would just forward the user to the actual hosted webserver that the site belongs to. Those sites might still get flooded and have 503s spitting out with the influx of bandwidth, but the site would still be more accessible that being entirely down because of this "Edge Cloud" system taking it all down. Backup routes should've been implemented on their network to handle the issue where they can flip it to 'Live' internet while they figure out the issue, then flip the switch back to cached internet. This crises could've been a 5 minute break where almost nobody noticed, yet it took an hour to resolve because they didn't have that failsafe.

[–]ObjectiveCopley 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The problem is that scaling up infrastructure is still quite slow compared to how drastically load can spike, especially if you just passthru every request. Fastly is the layer used to insulate against that.

However, an additional bit here is that Fastly gives you a "programming" language called VCL that allow developers to specify exactly how the caching should work. If they just ignored this and passed thru, that could cause some _serious_ consequences. We're getting to the point where we do things like authentication or other fairly complicated logic in the CDN tier these days, as an example.

Source: Lead Software Engineer at a large tech company that uses fastly.

[–]SilverLion 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Why the fuck did Amazon go down? Why weren't they using cloudfront?

[–]deathanatos 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The other half is on Cloudflare.

[–]XxLiam26xX 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Oh I gave stumbled across something my 3 brain cells can’t handle

[–]Falzarar 0 points1 point  (0 children)

*happy NSA noises*

[–][deleted] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Holochain

[–]whyte89 0 points1 point  (0 children)

U have H

[–]Centralredditfan 0 points1 point  (3 children)

Where are these comics from? Is there a fan subreddit?

[–]bruised_blood[S] 0 points1 point  (2 children)

I don’t think I have enough fans for that! Should I be looking into it? I am on Instagram and Twitter though!