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The Ultimate Guide to Startups
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The 24 Best Business Books in 2021, According to Goodreads Members
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by Jen Rice and Anna Matlin
Introduction
Airbnb was born in the cloud. In 2008, while many companies were operating data centers, a few clicks on the AWS console brought Airbnb to life. From our first Ruby on Rails app, to our more recent adoption of service-oriented architecture, the ability to instantly spin up compute and storage has enabled our teams to move quickly and meet the growing demands of our business. However, the business value this nimbleness affords can quickly be offset by cloud computing costs, unless the organizational capability to efficiently use these resources is developed.
Background
In the early days of Airbnb, our primary goal was growing the business. Technology teams were focused on growth, and we paid little attention to the cost of running our infrastructure. Several years ago, we noticed AWS monthly cost growth was outpacing revenue growth. We had a problem, but we lacked an in-depth understanding of how teams use AWS resources, and how planned arc
Arizona advances bill forcing Apple to allow Fortnite-style alternative payment options
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What you need to know
A new Senate Bill in North Dakota could destroy the iPhone as we know it, according to Apple.
Apple has said the bill undermines the privacy, security, safety, and performance that is built into the iPhone by design.
Staunch App Store critics like Epic Games CEO Tim Sweeney have vocalized support for the move.
A new Senate Bill introduced in North Dakota could destroy the iPhone as we know, according to Apple.
Proponents of a North Dakota Senate bill say the legislation would clamp down on app stores seen as monopolistic, but opponents see it as interference and potentially harmful.