@lawrence@lemmy.worldM to Comic Strips@lemmy.world • 1 month agoLinux processeslemmy.worldimagemessage-square66fedilinkarrow-up1570arrow-down119
arrow-up1551arrow-down1imageLinux processeslemmy.world@lawrence@lemmy.worldM to Comic Strips@lemmy.world • 1 month agomessage-square66fedilink
minus-square@Katana314@lemmy.worldlinkfedilinkEnglish6•1 month agoI’m going to guess quite a people here work on businesses where “sometimes breaks, but fixed in less than an hour” isn’t good enough for reliability.
minus-square@count_dongulus@lemmy.worldlinkfedilink0•edit-21 month agoYeah if you need even 99.9% uptime, the most downtime you can accept in a year is eight hours.
minus-square@trxxruraxvr@lemmy.worldlinkfedilink3•1 month agoMost businesses dont require that kind of uptime though. If i killed or servers for a couple of hours between 02:00 and 04:00 every night probably nobody would notice for at least a year if it wasn’t for the alerts we’d get.
I’m going to guess quite a people here work on businesses where “sometimes breaks, but fixed in less than an hour” isn’t good enough for reliability.
Yeah if you need even 99.9% uptime, the most downtime you can accept in a year is eight hours.
Most businesses dont require that kind of uptime though. If i killed or servers for a couple of hours between 02:00 and 04:00 every night probably nobody would notice for at least a year if it wasn’t for the alerts we’d get.