155: The Cloud Pod Shows Green in the New AWS Status Page
155: The Cloud Pod Shows Green in the New AWS Status Page  
Podcast: The Cloud Pod
Published On: Wed Mar 02 2022
Description: On The Cloud Pod this week, the team heads down a Cisco business model rabbithole. Plus cloud status pages struggle with reality, AWS is tracking carbon footprints, and Microsoft sees serious security business growth with Defender.  A big thanks to this week’s sponsor, Foghorn Consulting, which provides full-stack cloud solutions with a focus on strategy, planning and execution for enterprises seeking to take advantage of the transformative capabilities of AWS, Google Cloud and Azure. This week’s highlights Cloud status pages aren’t reflecting reported issues, in what appears to be a cover-up by error-shy cloud providers. AWS introduces a new carbon footprint dashboard to help customers track their sustainability for cleaner, greener living. Following on the heels of AWS and Azure, Microsoft Defender now provides security on Google Cloud, and is also available for Azure Cosmos DB. Top Quotes   “Understanding the thresholds would be nice, but it’s difficult, because if you have an instance up and running just fine, but you can’t launch a new instance, is EC2 down? Is the control plane being down the same as the service itself being down? The ability to launch a new instance would be fairly instrumental to using the service. There’re lots of very fine distinctions made between whether something’s working or not. I think a little more transparency is needed. But I don’t think they’re trying to mislead anybody.” “They’re so strong in other areas, I think it’s a mistake to try to compete everywhere with the two other companies that are roughly [their] size. Do the thing you’re really good at and just keep doing it better.” General News: Move Along, Everything’s Fine Here It seems like cloud providers are on a customer gaslighting mission, with cloud status pages not reflecting reported issues.  AWS: Continuing Its Tradition of Silly Names In a badly timed announcement, AWS shows off its new unified Health Dashboard. It does make sense to keep it in one place, though. Amazon S3 showcases important, super valuable new additional checksum algorithms. If it’s computationally expensive, push it back onto the client.  Amazon EC2 Auto Scaling Warm Pools has two new hibernation and scale-in features — a great solution for penny-pinchers who invested in Windows. The new AWS CloudSaga tool allows for security event simulation and testing. A great first step in what should prove to be cheaper than bringing in a whole team to do it.  How many IPv6 workloads are you running? Now you can connect them to IPv4 Services. Six months too late for Jonathan, AWS’ new Customer Carbon Footprint Tool allows customers to track sustainability, helping to reach those clean and green goals. <li