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Episode Description
Welcome to episode 318 of The Cloud Pod, where the forecast is always cloudy! We’re going on an adventure! Justin and Ryan have formed a fellowship of the cloud, and they’re bringing you all the latest and greatest news from Valinor to Helm’s Deep, and Azure to AWS to GCP. We’ve water issues, some Magic Quadrants, and Aurora updates…but sadly no potatoes. Let’s get into it!
Titles we almost went with this week:
You’ve Got No Mail: AOL Finally Hangs Up on Dial-Up
Ctrl+Alt+Delete Climate Change
H2-Oh No: Your Gmail is Thirsty
The Price is Vibe: Kiro’s New Request-Based Model
Spec-tacular Pricing: Kiro Leaves the Waitlist Behind
SHA-zam! GitHub Actions Gets Its Security Cape
Breaking Bad Actions: GitHub’s Supply Chain Intervention
Graph Your Way to Infrastructure Happiness
The Tables Have Turned: S3 Gets Its Iceberg Moment
Subnet Where It Hurts: GKE Finally Gets IP Address Relief
All Your Database Are Belong to Database Center
From Droplets to Dollars: DigitalOcean’s AI Pivot Pays Off
DigitalOcean Rides the AI Wave to
Record Earnings
Agent Smith Would Be Proud:
Microsoft’s Multi-Agent Matrix
Aurora Borealis: A Decade of Database
Enlightenment
Fifteen Shades of Cloud: AWS’s
Unbroken Streak
The Fast and the Failover-ious: Aurora
Edition
Gone in Single-Digit Seconds: AWS’s
Speedy Database Recovery
Agent 007: License to Secure Your AI
A big thanks to this week’s sponsor:
We’re sponsorless! Want to get your brand, company, or service in front of a very enthusiastic group of cloud news seekers? You’ve come to the right place! Send us an email or hit us up on our Slack channel for more info.
General News
01:02 AOL is finally shutting down its dial-up internet service | AP News
- AOL is discontinuing its dial-up internet service on September 30, 2024, marking the end of a technology that introduced millions to the internet in the 1990s and early 2000s.
- Census data shows 163,401 US households still used dial-up in 2023, representing 0.13% of homes with internet subscriptions, highlighting the persistence of legacy infrastructure in underserved areas – which is honestly crazy.
- Here’s hoping that these folks are able to switch to alternatives, like Starlink.
- This shutdown reflects broader technology lifecycle patterns as companies retire legacy services like Skype, Internet Explorer, and AOL Instant Messenger to focus resources on modern platforms.
- The transition away from dial-up demonstrates the evolution from telephone-based connectivity to broadband and wireless technologies that now dominate internet access.
- AOL’s journey from a $164 billion valuation in 2000 to being sold by Verizon in 2021 illustrat