>Also, to be fair to airlines, they have immense labour costs.
yeah. I also think that it's a good example of how some things? you can skimp on, while other things? not so much. I mean, if the airlines show that you can eliminate (or charge extra for) in-flight meals without disturbing anyone too much. You can even pack 'em in tighter (though, some people will pay extra for a little room.) - but yeah, you've still gotta keep the planes in the air.
Another interesting bit is that I'm not sure that it'd be cheaper to maintain airplanes to a lower standard, even without the customer backlash.
That's the thing; sometimes, the cheaper part is just as good- (for example, I think going supermicro is just as good as going dell, assuming the person assembling uses ESD protection.) - but other things? non-ecc ram, for instance, in my unscientific opinion, usually ends up being more expensive in terms of downtime and technician hours than ecc ram.
Of course, airlines are also almost all unionized; The hosting market is almost the opposite. Generally more is expected for less pay in the hosting market than of the same technical roles in other sectors. Traditionally, this means that many people start in the hosting market, then move up (certainly in terms of pay) into a corporate networking or corporate sysadmin role.
yeah. I also think that it's a good example of how some things? you can skimp on, while other things? not so much. I mean, if the airlines show that you can eliminate (or charge extra for) in-flight meals without disturbing anyone too much. You can even pack 'em in tighter (though, some people will pay extra for a little room.) - but yeah, you've still gotta keep the planes in the air.
Another interesting bit is that I'm not sure that it'd be cheaper to maintain airplanes to a lower standard, even without the customer backlash.
That's the thing; sometimes, the cheaper part is just as good- (for example, I think going supermicro is just as good as going dell, assuming the person assembling uses ESD protection.) - but other things? non-ecc ram, for instance, in my unscientific opinion, usually ends up being more expensive in terms of downtime and technician hours than ecc ram.
Of course, airlines are also almost all unionized; The hosting market is almost the opposite. Generally more is expected for less pay in the hosting market than of the same technical roles in other sectors. Traditionally, this means that many people start in the hosting market, then move up (certainly in terms of pay) into a corporate networking or corporate sysadmin role.