When you're running hundreds of integration test suites per day in CI pipelines, the free tier is irrelevant. You need fast, deterministic, isolated environments that spin up and tear down in seconds, not real AWS calls that introduce network latency, eventual consistency flakiness, rate limits, and costs that compound with every merge request.
It'd be great to just use AWS but in practice it doesn't happen. Even if billing doesn't, limits + no notion of namespacing will hit you very quickly in CI. It's also not practical to give every dev AWS account, I did it with 200 people it was OK but always caused management pain. Free tier also don't cover organizations.
> they MUST learn that there are no hard spend limits, and the only way to actually learn it, is to be bitten by it as early as possible
This is a bizarre take. "The best way to learn fire safety is to get burned." You can understand AWS billing without treating surprise charges as a rite of passage.
All my vertical videos in iCloud show up cropped horizontal for some reason. If I go to edit I see the whole video. I really do not want to trust any cloud provider to maintain my years of archives of family photos and videos. Glad things like this exist. I just need properly date-foldered files, without no duplciates. Is that so hard?
It's so opinionated but many people find it okay. And it's hard to install Arch successfully. Compared to Ubuntu Arch's package manager (also combined with AUR) are great.
I use every possible opportunity to say "Fuck Ubuntu Snaps"