Major us-east-1 outages happened in 2011, 2015, 2017, 2020, 2021, 2023, and now again. I understand that us-east-1, N. VA, was the first DC but for fucks sake they've had HOW LONG to finish AWS and make us-east-1 not be tied to keeping AWS up.
First, not all outages are created equal, so you cannot compare them like that.
I believe the 2021 one was especially horrific because of it affecting their dns service (route53) and the outage made writes to that service impossible. This made fail overs not work etcetera so their prescribed multi region setups didn't work.
But in the end, some things will have to synchronizes their writes somewhere, right? So for dns I could see how that ends up in a single region.
AWS is bound by the same rules as everyone else in the end... The only thing they have going for them that they have a lot of money to make certain services resilient, but I'm not aware of a single system that's resilient to everything.
If AWS fully decentralized its control planes, they’d essentially be duplicating the cost structure of running multiple independent clouds and I understand that is why they don't however as long as AWS is reliant upon us-east-1 to function, they have not achieved what they claim to me. A single point of failure for IAM? Nah, no thanks.
Every AWS “global” service be it IAM, STS, CloudFormation, CloudFront, Route 53, Organizations, they all have deep ties to control systems originally built only in us-east-1/n. va.
That's poor design, after all these years. They've had time to fix this.
Until AWS fully decouples the control plane from us-east-1, the entire platform has a global dependency. Even if your data plane is fine, you still rely on IAM and STS for authentication and maybe Route 53 for DNS or failover CloudFormation or ECS for orchestration...
If any of those choke because us-east-1’s internal control systems are degraded, you’re fucked. That’s not true regional independence.
You can only decentralized your control plane if you don't have conflicting requirements?
Assuming you cannot alter requirements or SLAs, I could see how their technical solutions are limited. It's possible, just not without breaking their promises. At that point it's no longer a technical problem
In the narrow distributed-systems sense? Yes, however those requirements are self-imposed. AWS chose strong global consistency for IAM and billing... they could loosen it at enormous expense.
The control plane must know the truth about your account and that truth must be globally consistent. That’s where the trouble starts I guess.
I think my old-school system admin ethos is just different than theirs. It's not a who's wrong or right, just a difference in opinions on how it should be done I guess.
The ISP I work for requires us to design in a way that no single DC will cause a point of failure, just difference in design methods and I have to remember the DC I work in is completely differently used than AWS.
In the end however, I know solutions for this exist (federated ledgers, CRDT-based control planes, regional autonomy but they’re just expensive and they don’t look good on quarterly slides), it just takes the almighty dollar to implement and that goes against big business, if it "works" it works, I guess.
AWS’s model scales to millions of accounts because it hides complexity, sure but the same philosophy that enables that scale prevents true decentralization. That is shit. I guess people can architect as if us-east-1 can disappear so that things can continue on, but then thats AWS causing complexity in your code. They are just shifting who is shouldering that little known issue.
HID (be it my mouse or trackpad, on either my Mac mini or MacBook) input works excellent on my Mac's. Nothing wrong here.
Not working how you prefer it doesn't make something unusable or broken...
BTW your supposed Mac mini has serious hardware problems, get that thing RMA'd ASAP! And man, why did you not RMA your MacBook Pro you bought a few years ago?? It was also just as broke!
Meanwhile I use both a 1080p display and a 1440p display (Both Dell displays) with zero issues on macOS Big Sur.
I get no odd behavior, both monitors are always detected nor do I see artifacting or anything other issue. There was some minor pink lines on the boot up screen that have since been fixed in the latest release. (M1 Mac mini)
I can't really say I noticed a difference personally since they removed text aliasing on 1440p or lower, however it's a single toggle to turn back on.
I get zero mouse lag with differing resolutions and I use both a Magic Mouse 2 and a Magic Touchpad 2.
Wow! I never saw that site but it is FULL of misinformation and purposely claiming misleading "facts". I like how there is absolutely no contact info, as this tool knows he's full of crap.
I'm quite pleased with my 1gb up/down for $165 from TruVista. Stable, cheap, IPv6 and a static IPv4 IP.
Not sure I agree with this guys opinion, but I might just be lucky? Everyone in my area uses a similar fiber plan. Again though maybe my small town of 10k~ people might be an outlier?
I still use a NUC5i3RYH every day. It has been remarkably stable, haven't had to replace a single part or have any issues since building it in 2015, and makes an outstanding Hackintosh to boot.
Either I got lucky with the two I own, or your environment was to harsh for them?