Thread regarding Avaya layoffs

"2023 could be the year of public cloud repatriation..."

Interesting read

"2023 could be the year of public cloud repatriation: With cloud costs and complexity higher than expected, many enterprises are making a U-turn and putting applications and data back in traditional systems."

https://www-infoworld-com.cdn.ampproject.org/c/s/www.infoworld.com/article/3684369/2023-could-be-the-year-of-public-cloud-repatriation.amp.html

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| 1671 views | | 3 replies (last January 6, 2023) | Reply
Post ID: @OP+1kyvXMI3

3 replies (most recent on top)

Did no one actually read the article? "High cloud bills are rarely the fault of the cloud providers. They are often self-inflicted by enterprises that don’t refactor applications and data to optimize their cost-efficiencies on the new cloud platforms...[and]...you’ll pay for the inefficiencies you chose not to deal with during the migration."

Will Avaya's new marketing message be, "Come back home when you're too lazy to use public cloud correctly"...?

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Post ID: @vxp+1kyvXMI3

So surprised to see there are some Avaya folks still having wishful thinking. There are way better employers out there and you deserve to be treated fairly.

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Post ID: @xni+1kyvXMI3

Wishful thinking supported by struggling vendors that never made the transition to a real SaaS model, which excludes rehosting server software on a PPU and calling it cloud.

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Post ID: @bbd+1kyvXMI3

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