The more niche something is, the more vocal the members. So, yes. People would probably notice.
But also, the point was that a MacBook (or single server) can just replace the infrastructure defined in the article. That is clearly not the case if you’re suddenly losing uptime. That is a material deterioration, any way you put it.
And even if you didn’t choose to go the HA route, you still need to set up and maintain the server and all the things running on it. And fix issues when they come up. Choosing to have downtime does not magically make any of what I said go away; it at most eases the burden slightly.
Nobody cares about 99.999% uptime of an open source game. Nobody needs a sub-second convergence time of 99.999% of existing companies' networks. A couple of minutes of downtime is non-issue.
Totally agree. Just as a point of reference that a professional service with significantly stronger uptime targets fails to meet these unrealistic expectations. For an open source game with volunteer resources, it is not reasonable to expect anything more.
Edit: I would go so far as to say they could even have a weekly “patch Wednesday” where the expectation is set that there would be an hour of downtime.
Oh yes, a random person on HN says something is a non-issue so their word must be gospel. Definitely.
I explained exactly what needs to be maintained and why that’s a lot of work. You are free to disagree, but just saying “trust me bro” is not a compelling argument.
Have you ever maintained your own server? Or even tried? It’s not nearly as easy as you clearly think it is.
Oh, I remember you. This amount of hostility to the world is difficult not to notice. So at least you're not a rando here. Clearly a name to remember.
> It’s not nearly as easy as you clearly think it is.
Dunno, I'm 20+ years in the industry. It's not easy, though it's just a skill. You can hire a person who would do that for you. It's not necessary to make it look like a wizardry. It's just a skill.
I offer counseling if you're struggling with the basics. For you personally it would be 200% extra though. I don't like unnecessary rude people.
If you think hiring a person to manage this is cheaper than the setup they have, or even remotely reasonable for a volunteer project, then there’s nothing more to discuss.
That is in no way shape or form grounded in reality.
I think I know a bit more about this particular problem than a (senior) software developer. Infra management is my profession, which I've been doing for decades. The conversation might have been more interesting if you hadn't been so rude initially.
This conversation might have been more interesting if your point was anything but "it's easy, trust me bro", which you continue to do.
Waving credentials around and proposing solutions not remotely feasible for the problem at hand generally does not sway people nor provide for interesting discussion.
But also, the point was that a MacBook (or single server) can just replace the infrastructure defined in the article. That is clearly not the case if you’re suddenly losing uptime. That is a material deterioration, any way you put it.
And even if you didn’t choose to go the HA route, you still need to set up and maintain the server and all the things running on it. And fix issues when they come up. Choosing to have downtime does not magically make any of what I said go away; it at most eases the burden slightly.