I think one of the really interesting parts about our company is everything, end to end, is bespoke from like order ingest to order being dispatched from the warehouse. We control everything in that pipeline. The only things we depend on is buying labels from carriers. So I think purely because we're moving to a more service oriented architecture, we're probably going to continue to depend on Kuberys. It makes more sense to stay on Kubernetes.
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Eight months ago, in π§ episode 49, Alex Sims (Solutions Architect & Senior Software Engineer at James & James) shared with us his ambition to help migrate a monolithic PHP app running on AWS EC2 to a more modern architecture. The idea was some serverless, some EKS, and many incremental improvements.
So how did all of this work out in practice? How did the improved system cope with the Black Friday peak, as well as all the following Christmas orders? Thank you Alex for sharing with us your Ship It! inspired Kaizen story. Itβs a wonderful Christmas present! ππ
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