Yeah that is pretty bad I guess. For decades 99% has been achievable for many orgs. 92% phew.
But “waste” is arguable. If folks have literally nothing to do when GitHub is down, I question that a bit. For example, design, administrative work (everyone has that), lunch. You know?
Critical CI/CD can use Jenkins, but in that case folks might end up with 89% uptime!
How frequent? I think the obsession with uptime is annoying. If GitHub is down, if there’s something so critical, then you need some more control of the system. Otherwise take a couple hours and get a coffee or an early lunch.
Note we’re only talking about alcohol here. It’s funny how people read something, skip the specifics, assume it applies to everything and then spread misinformation.
So if you want a comparison in USA it needs to be something that is regulated by the US government, like hydroxacloroquine.
But “waste” is arguable. If folks have literally nothing to do when GitHub is down, I question that a bit. For example, design, administrative work (everyone has that), lunch. You know?
Critical CI/CD can use Jenkins, but in that case folks might end up with 89% uptime!