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Why Microsoft Azure Well-Architected Framework Can Improve Architecture

Small and medium-sized businesses often face a common challenge: the absence of experienced cloud engineers. Due to limited resources, teams typically choose the quickest path—getting things done in the easiest, fastest way. Unfortunately, this approach often leads to solutions that aren't secure, cost too much, and become nearly impossible to extend or manage effectively. Recognizing this critical challenge, Microsoft Azure has developed the Well-Architected Framework. This comprehensive set of guidelines and best practices helps businesses assess their existing solutions and guides them toward building robust, secure, cost-effective, and manageable cloud infrastructures from the start. The Azure Well-Architected Framework is structured around five essential pillars: Cost Optimization : Ensuring that cloud resources are used efficiently and effectively, reducing unnecessary expenses. Operational Excellence : Focusing on the ability to run and monitor systems effectively, ensuring ...

"Dushnylo" Series: Monolith First approach.

I keep hearing, “You MUST start with a monolith.” Every new project? Always? When I hear that, two thoughts immediately come to mind:      1️⃣ “It depends.” You can’t just blindly say every project must start as a monolith.      2️⃣ My inner Dushnylo whispers: “Time to make a post about this.” So, here’s my take: I disagree. Not only do I disagree, but I believe the most critical and dangerous part of system design is analyzing and understanding business needs before making architectural decisions. Why? Simple. Imagine you’re building a streaming platform that processes massive amounts of data, handles notifications, and integrates with third-party services. Does this sound like something you’d build as a pure monolith? Of course not. But I do agree on one thing—you have to start somewhere. That starting point could be a simple core application —yes, it might look like a monolith at first. But you’re not designing the entire system as a monolith. ...

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