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Building at scale: How we moved from Serverless to Kubernetes (Part 1)
Our journey began with a reverse proxy service we used facilitate access to blockchain Nodes. Initially, we ran this service on Cloudflare Workers, a serverless platform that was handling over 5,000 requests per second globally. It worked well at first — but as usage grew, so did our concerns around
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Building at scale: How we moved from Serverless to Kubernetes (Part 1)
Our journey began with a reverse proxy service we used facilitate access to blockchain Nodes. Initially, we ran this service on Cloudflare Workers, a serverless platform that was handling over 5,000 requests per second globally. It worked well at first — but as usage grew, so did our concerns around
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Building at scale: How we moved from Serverless to Kubernetes (Part 1)
Our journey began with a reverse proxy service we used facilitate access to blockchain Nodes. Initially, we ran this service on Cloudflare Workers, a serverless platform that was handling over 5,000 requests per second globally. It worked well at first — but as usage grew, so did our concerns around
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