r/devopsprojectshq

NEW: Meta employees consumed 73.7 trillion AI tokens in a single month. Which costs roughly $221 million a month and around $2.65 billion a year.
▲ 1.3k r/devopsprojectshq+1 crossposts

NEW: Meta employees consumed 73.7 trillion AI tokens in a single month. Which costs roughly $221 million a month and around $2.65 billion a year.

Meta burns $2.65B a year on AI tokens. at $300K for a Meta engineer, that's enough to pay ~9,000 engineers for a full year.

now ask yourself: since the layoffs, has Meta shipped anything that feels like 9,000 engineers’ worth of output?

u/Current-Guide5944 — 4 days ago
▲ 14 r/devopsprojectshq+1 crossposts

Flickr is hiring a Sr. Site Reliability Engineer

We're hiring a Senior Site Reliability Engineer. AWS-heavy environment, Terraform, Kubernetes, remote, salary range included. Looking for engineers who enjoy operating production systems rather than pure application development. For more info, click HERE.

The salary range for this role is $132,000- $190,300. This position is also remote-friendly, and as such, compensation will ultimately be in line with the location in which the position is filled. Various factors, such as defined competency leveling and geographic location, will determine the final compensation for this role.

u/PhotographyWorkisFun — 4 days ago
▲ 765 r/devopsprojectshq+1 crossposts

Uber left PagerDuty after using it for 12 years.

I wonder what took them so long. PagerDuty seems to have become one of those heavyweight products that are so content in their illusion of market dominance that they have stopped innovating. But until the enterprise CFOs wake up and ask why is this costing us 5k per month, they are going to stay in their bubble.

I last used PD 3 years ago, and the UI had not changed in years, looked like something out of a 90s app. Pricing was our way or the highway.

No wonder people are leaving it for other solutions.

u/thomsterm — 6 days ago
▲ 213 r/devopsprojectshq+2 crossposts

Over 603 businesses that responded to the survey by the digital industry association Bitkom found that 85% of companies believe Germany is too dependent on US cloud providers,At the same time, German businesses themselves are willing to make sacrifices out of fear of becoming too reliant on US tech.

technology.org
u/smilelyzen — 14 days ago