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Welcome! Let’s Talk About DevOps That Actually Works

·348 words·2 mins

👋 Welcome! Let’s Talk About DevOps That Actually Works
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Hey there — I’m Francisco Meza, and welcome to my corner of the internet.

After spending over a decade deep in the trenches of DevOps and Platform Engineering, I figured it was time to start documenting some of the lessons, wins, and (plenty of) learning moments along the way.

Think of this blog as a digital notepad — a place where I share real-world insights from scaling infrastructure, debugging mysterious alerts at 2 a.m., or untangling legacy CI pipelines that were duct-taped together back in 2016.


🧰 What You Can Expect Here
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This won’t be a place for buzzwords or theory-only content. I want to talk about the real stuff:

  • Why our monitoring bill dropped by $750K after switching to VictoriaMetrics
  • How I helped migrate a legacy platform to Kubernetes in under 30 days
  • What actually breaks during a CI/CD migration — and how to fix it
  • The DevOps tools I love (and the ones I’d rather never see again)

Whether you’re a solo engineer figuring out Terraform for the first time, or someone leading platform efforts at scale, I hope you find something helpful here — or at the very least, relatable.


🔄 DevOps Is More Than Tools
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Yes, I work with Terraform, Kubernetes, ArgoCD, and all the shiny stuff — but the real challenge in DevOps isn’t just infrastructure.

It’s about:

  • Knowing when to refactor vs. rebuild
  • Getting buy-in from teams that don’t care about “IaC”
  • Teaching others without gatekeeping
  • Balancing stability with speed

That’s what I want to write about. Not just how things work, but how to make them work for you.


🚀 Up Next
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In the next post, I’ll break down one of the most impactful changes I’ve made recently: using Karpenter for auto-scaling Kubernetes workloads — and what it saved us in real terms.

Spoiler: It wasn’t just money.

Until then — thanks for stopping by. If you’re into cloud-native tech, DevOps, or just want to geek out about monitoring stacks, stick around. More to come soon.

Francisco