It's Christmas time and you've been wracking your brain trying to find the perfect gift that will teach your loved ones about the cloud in a simple and entertaining way. What to do?
Fortunately for you, Santa has a new elf this year—Forrest Brazeal—who is part AWS Serverless Hero, part skilled cartoonist, and part cloud guru.
Yes, it's a cartoon book about the cloud!
No, I didn't think it could be done either, but Forrest pulled it off with a twinkle in his eyes and little round belly that shook when he laughed, like a bowl full of jelly.
One of the many five-star reviews:
The Read Aloud Cloud is a delightful book. It's 165 pages of hand-drawn cartoons, entertaining verse, and hard-won wisdom.
It truly is a load of fun to flip through. I read it to my kids (8 & 6), and they love it. I'll share it with my parents so they can finally understand what I do. I learned a ton about the history of computing and of course all the ways that we as humans stumble through making our computers do what we want.
Here's my email interview with Forrest Brazeal on The Read Aloud Cloud: An Innocent's Guide to the Tech Inside. Enjoy. And happy Christmas to all, and to all a good night!
I’ve spent the last decade as a cloud architect, writer, and cartoonist, and in 2018 became an AWS Serverless Hero. Presently I work at A Cloud Guru, a cloud education startup known for teaching more than two million people about the cloud through fresh, often unorthodox methods. My first book, “The Read Aloud Cloud”, is now available from Wiley and in bookstores everywhere.
“The Read Aloud Cloud” is a friendly introduction to cloud computing for just about anyone - but particularly your non-technical friends and family. More than 160 pages of illustrated explainers will hopefully help you pull off what I struggled to do for years: explaining your job to people who have no frame of reference for what “the cloud” even is.
I regretted committing to doing the book in rhyme almost as soon as the contract was signed. It was impossibly hard, and I cheated wherever I could. For example, the chapter on reliability uses the thematic excuse of failing systems to disintegrate into perverse compromises of rhyme and meter. (Fans of doggerel poetry may also recognize this chapter as homage to Ogden Nash.)
That said, it still wasn’t as hard as rhyming 168 AWS services.
Thank you for saying so! This book is a direct spiritual descendant of the “FaaS and Furious” webcomic. I struggled the most with the prehistoric computers in the “Evolution of the Cloud” chapter because I really wanted them to look recognizable, and mainframes in particular are hard to caricature! The forgiving reader will hopefully spot a Control Data 6500, an IBM 401, some sort of DEC thing that could be a PDP-10, and several classic PCs including the Apple 2. The wooly mammoth on page 20 is holding my first computer, a 1992 Apple Powerbook, between his tusks.
I actually believe this! (Blows into breathalyzer) The cloud, broadly speaking (and including higher-level SaaS offerings) gives anyone the ability to start and scale an online business without any upfront IT costs. We’ve seen the power of that combination with basically every startup of the last decade. Remember, Instagram was serving 30 million users on AWS with a total of 13 employees when Facebook bought them. (And then moved them immediately out of the cloud and into Facebook’s data centers. Yeah yeah, reality is a buzzkill.)
The cloud is challenging to reason about because it touches everyone’s life, and yet it’s so abstract that the layperson doesn’t have much of a frame of reference for comprehending it. At least we have some intuition about why a doctor or a lawyer exists, even if we don’t understand the nuances of their work. But what does a “cloud architect” build, and why does it matter? That’s what I’d like to hear people asking, instead of the question asked by “Your Uncle Mike” at the beginning of Chapter 1. (“Is my data, like, up in the sky, or what?”)
The Read Aloud Cloud provides examples of jobs in the cloud (security engineer, architect, developer, etc) right along with the technical subjects, and several people have told me that really helps make the cloud feel more “real” to them.
If I could do this all over again, I would come up with a different title and subtitle, because I think it gives the impression that this is just a book for kids. I mean, the book is appropriate for children (well, except for the chapter about smart devices, that’s pretty scary), and I definitely hope that weird children will find it on their parents’ desks and become lifelong nerds like me. But really it’s a book for adult humans to enjoy, chuckle over, share, and hopefully learn from.
Two things, flip sides of the same coin:
The greatest - ie, the one with the biggest impact for the largest number of people. Only you can answer for yourself what the “best” cloud service is. (It’s also S3.)
You say “The cloud is meant for you to build on.” I thought it was meant for cloud providers to make a ton of money. What do you mean?
Who said those two are mutually exclusive? As long as cloud systems generate more value than they cost, we all win.
I went into the traditional publishing process with open eyes, and my experience so far confirms pretty much what I was told:
So why go with a traditional publisher? Here was my reasoning:
The Wiley experience was overall positive for me and I don't regret it, but if I ever produce a text-based info product in future it's hard to look away from the ROI advantages of self-publishing.
The book covers this a bit, but in brief (and in prose): for greenfield use-cases, there will always be low-latency or intermittent-connectivity applications that need to function client-side, even if they ultimately ship some data to the cloud. For legacy apps, well, all bets are off. I know of a 40-year-old insurance app that will never move off its mainframe because the hardware handles floating point operations differently than modern processors, and nobody knows if they could trust the code anywhere else. In that case, literally speaking, a cloud migration just wouldn’t add up.
A great start, a dangerous stopping place.
True at the organizational level, fantasy at the workload level.
Azure told.
When he leaves a few GPU instances running and - poof! - makes your budget disappear.
Opens up more use cases for serverless, and more wallets for AWS.
The future is here, it’s just not evenly distributed, he said, pocketing his $2.50 royalty check from Wiley.
Wait for it!