Not too push the point too hard, but a "dev environment" for a product is for a business (not an individual consumer). Having a server (rack) in an office is not that hard, but alas the cloud might be better here for ease of administration.
And plenty of datacenters will be happy to give you some space in one of their racks.
Not wanting to deal with backups or HA are decent reasons to put a database in the cloud (as long as you are aware how much you are overpaying). Not having a good place to put the server is not a good reason
> one of the couple dozen databases
I guess this is one of those use cases that justify the cloud. It's hard to host that reliably at home.
Not too push the point too hard, but a "dev environment" for a product is for a business (not an individual consumer). Having a server (rack) in an office is not that hard, but alas the cloud might be better here for ease of administration.
My understanding is that aws exists because we can't get any purchase approved in under three months.
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And plenty of datacenters will be happy to give you some space in one of their racks.
Not wanting to deal with backups or HA are decent reasons to put a database in the cloud (as long as you are aware how much you are overpaying). Not having a good place to put the server is not a good reason
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