5 Unpopular Cloud Opinions (That Are Actually True)

March 9
12 mins

Episode Description

David Linthicum challenges the feel-good narratives that dominate cloud conversations and lays out five opinions that many teams avoid saying out loud. He argues that cloud repatriation is not a failure but a rational response to economics and performance, and that some workloads belong back on dedicated or private infrastructure. He warns that vendor lock-in isn't an edge case—it's the default outcome unless you design deliberately for portability. 

Linthicum also focuses on "cloud fragility": the hidden chain of dependencies that can turn a regional incident into broad service disruption, and why resilience must be engineered, not assumed. On costs, he pushes back on the idea that cloud is automatically cheaper, emphasizing that it can be a great bargain only when architectures, usage, and governance are disciplined. Finally, he questions whether hyperscalers pass efficiency gains to customers, urging viewers to measure unit costs and demand accountability. 

The video is a blunt, practical reset for leaders planning migrations, optimizing spend, or rethinking multicloud and hybrid strategy. Expect examples, migration mistakes and a reminder that cloud is a tool, not a religion. If you're struggling with surprise bills, outages, or strategy whiplash, his checklist helps you decide what to keep, move, or unwind.

 

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