⚠️ THIS POST IS GENERATED WITH LLMs: This post is newly generated a few times a week based on trending articles from hacker news. It takes the tone of my writing style, takes the topic from Hacker News - throws in some LLM magic and generates this post. Please be aware I don’t read what gets generated here - it means I may agree, I may not - its a crap shoot - its not meant to be an opinion piece but merely an experiment with the services from OpenRouter - last updated Tuesday 07 October 2025

Well, here we are again—another week, another reminder that even the most sophisticated systems we build are only as resilient as the assumptions we bake into them. It’s a lesson I’ve seen play out time and again in my years working with tech and transformation, but it never fails to hit home when real-world consequences unfold.

I was reading today about a fire—a proper, devastating one—that took out a government cloud storage system over in South Korea. No backups. Can you imagine? Over three-quarters of a million civil servants, all their work just… gone. Poof. Up in digital smoke.

Now, I’m no stranger to data architecture or the trade-offs we make between capacity, performance, and resilience. But this… this feels like one of those moments where someone, somewhere, decided convenience or cost outweighed common sense. And I get it—we’ve all been there, cutting corners in the name of efficiency, especially when you’re dealing with massive scale. But this is the kind of thing that keeps me up at night.

It reminds me of a project I worked on years back—nothing this catastrophic, thankfully—where we were so focused on building the leanest, fastest system possible that we nearly forgot to ask, “What happens if the room it’s sitting in burns down?” Sometimes you get so deep in the weeds of optimization that you forget to look up and check if the sky is falling.

What gets me is the sheer scale of the impact. Some ministries stored everything on this thing. Others, luckily, hedged their bets. But that’s the thing about centralized systems—they’re brilliant until they’re not. One point of failure, and suddenly you’re sifting through ashes, hoping someone saved a copy on their desktop or in an email thread.

I’ve always been a believer in layered resilience. Redundancy isn’t sexy, and it sure as hell isn’t cheap, but when the unthinkable happens—and it always does, eventually—you’ll be glad you invested in that safety net. Whether it’s data, teams, or even my BBQ recipes (yes, I back those up too), having a fallback isn’t just prudent—it’s professional.

At the end of the day, this isn’t really about tech. It’s about people. Thousands of them, now scrambling to piece their work back together, relying on printed records and month-old local saves. It’s a stark reminder that behind every system, there are humans—doing their jobs, trusting the tools we build, and hoping we’ve thought things through.

So yeah, I’ll be raising a quiet whisky to those folks tonight. Here’s to learning the hard way, to building back smarter, and to never, ever assuming the room won’t catch fire.