Rivera & ServerlessGuy
Ever noticed how the modernist movement in architecture, with its clean lines and stripped‑down ornament, seems almost a blueprint for the serverless wave we're riding?
Yeah, both like to get rid of the old paint‑splattered details and just leave the essentials standing. Clean lines in a building become a clean event‑driven API in the cloud, and the less ornament you keep, the fewer doors for bugs to hide. The trick is making sure the missing bits aren’t just hidden in some other system you forget to look at.
Exactly – but the devil's still in the details. A slick façade can hide a tangled dependency chain, so you better map every “hidden door” before the cloud starts to whisper. Otherwise you’ll end up with a minimalist design that’s actually a maze.
Right, so keep the façade clean but your dependency graph should be as visible as a whiteboard—otherwise you’ll spend nights chasing ghosts in the cloud. Just remember, the only thing worse than a hidden door is a hidden dependency that brings down the whole minimalist shrine.
Sure thing—if you want to avoid ghost‑busting, just keep that dependency graph on the wall like a sticky note, and remember that even a minimalist shrine can collapse if the foundation hides a broken chain.