Born in 1979, engineer, doctorate in 2008, I've started my working activity both as a researcher and as a freelance in the industrial automation field.
Yes, because you have to remember that more services require more boilerplate, more deploying time, more of non-core activity, therefore: either you automate every single bit to the extreme, or you are open to pay a lot of time to non-core as this saves time in development management (e.g: how the fox can I manage this new piece of functionality while not crashing everything around?! how can I better manage the scrum/agile/anything approach for a project such big?!)
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Yes, because you have to remember that more services require more boilerplate, more deploying time, more of non-core activity, therefore: either you automate every single bit to the extreme, or you are open to pay a lot of time to non-core as this saves time in development management (e.g: how the fox can I manage this new piece of functionality while not crashing everything around?! how can I better manage the scrum/agile/anything approach for a project such big?!)