I believe you're correct, although pedantically that would only apply if one is using their vpc-cni <https://github.com/aws/amazon-vpc-cni-k8s#readme> and not with a competing CNI. Kubelet offers a configurable for the number of Pods per Node <https://github.com/kubernetes/kubelet/blob/v0.26.2/config/v1...> which defaults to 110 for what I would presume is CIDR or pid cgroups reasons and thus is unlikely to differ by instance size as the ENI limit you mention does (IIRC)
Not sure about Okta, but systems I've seen in the past (fraud detection etc) will quickly learn the pattern and not challenge you as often. It depends a lot on the data points the system uses to calculate risk as well as any configurable thresholds.
Same here. It's easy to forget the difference between a master LEGO builder and the average person just piecing together bricks though. Knowing what to build and when/how is a lot of the job too. I try and remind myself that we're also often there to help other people build better things, perhaps analogous to automatically sorting LEGO bricks so other people building can move faster with fewer compromises.
This applies to most high-value knowledge work. Figuring out which problem to solve and how to define success is much more difficult than actually turning the crank to implement whatever solution.
Yeah, something I feel people (particularly who aren't in my normal tech-industry sphere) I hear discussing data privacy seem to think is that the data itself is being sold/shared with third parties. To be fair though, the concept of any sense of privacy from a service built on seemingly invading your privacy is a complex one to digest
Funny reading this about to get into a call with Rackspace trying to rationalize our accounting department not paying some huge invoices well past due... luckily they haven't turned anything off though. Can't say anything negative about them in that regard.
Uptime is the first most important thing for internet companies! Guarantee the upmost uptime builds great reputations for a cloud provider, don't know why Google still don't get it.