How to Chase the Shiny, Chasing the One Which Is Popular
I think after being developed for several years, everyone's solving the same problems just with a nice, a bit of syntactic sugar around it. What I tend to look at now is for the new services that I built recently,. It was PHP is really good for serving web requests and sort of doing some messaging stuff. But we've now got a really high throughput service that needs to sort of be a long-lived consumer of messages then processing those messages. Node.js off the bat is screaming out at me because it's built for handling lots of messages at once and processing them. If your service is narrowly scoped, you can rewrite that service in WordPress or something similar.
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Alex Sims, a Senior Software Engineer at James & James, an eCommerce fulfilment company, reached out to us about the Kaizen story of the third-party logistics (3PL) platform that he has been involved with for several years now.
The system delivered 16 millions of orders in 10 years, and 4.5 million in the last year alone. All the numbers are going up, and there is only so much that a single PHP monolith deployed as VM images can handle. So how do you even start thinking about the architectural improvements, and inspire everyone involved to move towards better?
We encourage you to look at the architectural diagrams in the show notes, especially the 10 year roadmap, and ask Alex for a blog post follow-up. While today’s episode was a good conversation starter, there is a lot that we did not have time to cover.
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