Posts

The Price Is a Story. The Cost Is the Truth.

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The other day, I was looking at a pair of sunglasses. Same model, same lenses, same performance, yet two very different prices: $244 and $162 . That’s when something clicked. Price isn’t what we think it is. The Illusion of Price We grow up believing a simple rule: higher price means better product, lower price means compromise. But the real world doesn’t work like that. Most of the time, price has little to do with the product itself. It’s about positioning. Brands don’t just sell utility. They sell perception, trust, and convenience, and all of that gets baked into the price tag. What You’re Really Paying For By the time a product reaches you, it carries far more than its manufacturing cost. It includes production, branding, marketing, retail margins, logistics, and customer service. What you pay isn’t just for the object; it’s for the entire system behind it. The price is a story. The cost is the truth. Same Product, Different Buyers Two people can buy the exact same product and pa...

Teaching Patience in a World Obsessed With Speed

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  When people talk about money, they usually talk in numbers . “How much will it be worth?” “Will it reach six figures?” “Is that enough?” But numbers without context can be misleading. What actually matters is purchasing power ,   what that money can do when the time comes. This post isn’t about chasing quick returns or timing markets. It’s about inflation , investing , and why time is the most powerful tool parents have when planning for their children. The Quiet Problem With Inflation Inflation doesn’t announce itself loudly. It doesn’t show up as a sudden loss. Instead, it quietly reduces what money can buy year after year. Something that costs $1,000 today may cost $1,700 or more in 20 years  , not because it’s better, but because each dollar is worth a little less. This is why simply saving money isn’t enough anymore. Even “doing nothing” has a cost. Why Cash Loses Without Risk If money sits still: The number stays the same Prices keep rising Purchasing power falls...

Oracle 19c: PDB‑to‑PDB Clone & Refresh Using Database Links (SE2)

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A Practical Way to Refresh DEV and TEST from PROD Refreshing DEV or TEST databases from PROD is something every DBA does regularly. Traditionally, this meant using RMAN duplicate or Data Pump. Both approaches work, but they take time, consume storage, and often feel heavier than the problem itself. From Oracle 12.2 onwards, a better option exists. Refreshable PDB allows you to clone one PDB into another using a database link and keep it updated using redo. This feature is fully supported in Oracle 19c Standard Edition 2. In this post, I walk through PDB to PDB cloning and refresh, along with the mistakes that usually cost the most time. Why Use Refreshable PDB Refreshable PDB changes how you think about cloning. Instead of rebuilding environments repeatedly, you create once and refresh when needed. It gives you Faster refresh compared to RMAN or Data Pump No export or import cycle Minimal impact on production Ideal for DEV, TEST, QA, and reporting Works even in Oracle 19c Standard ...

Ansible Automation Platform Jobs Stuck in Pending: Root Cause and Fix

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Today I ran into one of those issues that looks complex, but turns out to be beautifully simple. Every job I launched in Ansible Automation Platform (Tower / Controller 4.5) just sat there. No output. No errors. No movement. Just PENDING . And sometimes, silence is the loudest signal. What I Saw Everything looked healthy on the surface: Job templates launched successfully Jobs stayed in PENDING forever No logs, no failures, no hints Execution Environments looked perfectly fine At first, I suspected Ansible itself,  playbooks, environments, something deep. But this didn’t feel like a playbook problem. This felt like something wasn’t even starting . The Turning Point When jobs don’t start at all, it’s usually not Ansible… it’s scheduling. So I went one level lower services. That’s when I checked Receptor , the quiet engine behind job execution in AAP 4.x. And there it was: systemctl status receptor ● receptor.service - Receptor    Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/system...

Hope in the Future: Why I Prefer Long‑Term Investments Over Quick Wins

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  There’s a question I often reflect on: Why am I more inclined toward long‑term, consistent investments instead of rushing into real estate or chasing fast returns? I don’t deny the importance of diversification. Any well‑balanced portfolio should ideally be spread across multiple investment types like equities, real estate, fixed income, and alternative assets. But for me, the future‑focused approach offers something deeper than numbers on a balance sheet. It gives me relief, hope, and most importantly teaches me patience. Long‑term investing forces you to trust time rather than timing. Whether it’s contributing steadily to a TTPF, building a 529 plan for education, holding a VUL life insurance policy, or sticking to systematic investment plans, the philosophy remains the same: consistency over intensity. Automating investments, especially in strong, innovative companies like the so‑called Magnificent 7 removes emotion from the equation and replaces it with discipline. These choi...

From $17K to ~$1K: How We Optimized Azure Log Analytics Costs

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  Introduction Cloud costs do not always rise because of growth. Sometimes they rise because of configuration. That was exactly the case in our environment. We noticed that Log Analytics costs had climbed to roughly $17,000 per month . At first, nothing obvious stood out. There were no major application changes, no large-scale onboarding of new workloads, and no sudden increase in operational activity. But once we reviewed the ingestion data closely, the real issue became clear: a logging configuration was generating far more data than was actually needed. This post explains what we found, what we changed, and how the environment moved from a high-cost logging model to a much more efficient one while still keeping the right operational and security visibility. The Problem: High Log Analytics Ingestion The first step was to understand which tables were driving ingestion. Using the Usage table in Log Analytics, we reviewed billable ingestion over time and by data type. The results s...

Designing Reliable and Cost-Effective SQL Server Backups to Azure

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Introduction Backups are one of those things we rarely think about—until the moment we need them the most. In a recent scenario, I had to design a solution to move and retain large SQL Server backups (around 2TB) from on-premises to Azure for a short duration. What initially seemed simple quickly evolved into a design problem involving cost, performance, automation, and reliability . This post walks through the thinking, decisions, and lessons learned. The Problem Multiple SQL Server databases One large database (~2TB) Daily backups required for 2 weeks Fast restore capability needed Cost-sensitive solution This wasn’t just backup—it was controlled, intentional data movement . The Questions That Matter This is where the real engineering begins: Do we need Hot, Cool, or Archive storage? What if restore is needed immediately? Should we copy .bak files or backup directly? How do we automate safely? What happens if authentication expires? How do we handle large databases efficiently? Thes...