For small apps this may seem overkill. E.g. some back-office that a few internal people use
But for larger apps at scale, growing more means degrading user experience. I found that Amazon really takes it into account: I have had to create investigate increases of sub millisecond latency in the retail Search page to a…
For small apps this may seem overkill. E.g. some back-office that a few internal people use
But for larger apps at scale, growing more means degrading user experience. I found that Amazon really takes it into account: I have had to create investigate increases of sub millisecond latency in the retail Search page to ask leadership support on launching a feature. I imagine Discord also found the same, people would leave if they can't access information fast
Interesting read, NK!
For small apps this may seem overkill. E.g. some back-office that a few internal people use
But for larger apps at scale, growing more means degrading user experience. I found that Amazon really takes it into account: I have had to create investigate increases of sub millisecond latency in the retail Search page to ask leadership support on launching a feature. I imagine Discord also found the same, people would leave if they can't access information fast
Some interesting read about it: https://www.gigaspaces.com/blog/amazon-found-every-100ms-of-latency-cost-them-1-in-sales
hey Fran, thanks for the link.