I think this is primarily a tech stack crisis, or just stack crisis since the tech is sorta implied. The assumption that it’s the same emergent machine, just overloaded and unbalanced in parts, and temporarily broken in non-fatal ways at the margins... this is false.
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I’m betting the answer is 2. There’s going to be a huge pile of crap in the log file of this integration test to sort through. Full rollback is impossible, but we’ll do a lot of local, partial rollbacks/reverts to the old stack while we fix this in production.
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In a way this is the other side of the yin-yang. Pre-covid was the old stack with patches of localized new stack units. The rollback will be new stack with patches of old stack units. It will be an unholy mess that will take a decade to cleanup.
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So if this hypothesis is correct, the reboot problem is a tech problem: how to finish the unfinished stack that has been hot-swapped in? I think if the economic approach aims at this problem, it will “take” otherwise it will not, and trigger a secondary larger technology crisis.
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By which I don’t mean a tech market crisis like the dotcom bust, I mean an actual tech crisis like Y2K. But way harder.
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From my vantage point this seems like a smooth changeover.
#coldbootThanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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