As a software architect, I hate serverless. Not because it doesn't work, but because it forces design constraints that cripple your application. Here's why always-on servers matter.
Article exactly describes how I feel about next.js -ers.
So far none of them was able to explain to me why lack of connection pooling is A good thing. I doubt they even know what that is. If you build a website in server less - you might as well use php because it will beat node.js in raw speed on those conditions and you are handicapping it similarly.
Article exactly describes how I feel about next.js -ers.
So far none of them was able to explain to me why lack of connection pooling is A good thing. I doubt they even know what that is. If you build a website in server less - you might as well use php because it will beat node.js in raw speed on those conditions and you are handicapping it similarly.