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Edge Functions Are Eating Your Backendโ€”And Thatโ€™s a Good Thing

Remember when every new feature meant spinning up a microservice, a load balancer, and a fresh set of Terraform files? Those days are evaporating faster than free cloud credits. Edge functionsโ€”Vercelโ€™s, Netlifyโ€™s, Cloudflareโ€™s, you name itโ€”now cold-start in under 50 ms, stream JSON, and auto-scale to zero dollars when no oneโ€™s looking. The result: the โ€œbackendโ€ is no longer a server you babysit, but a handful of JavaScript snippets flung to the CDNโ€™s edge, living closer to your users than your last relationship.

The architectural shift is subtle yet seismic. Authentication? A 40-line worker that checks JWT against KV storage. Image resizing? One runtime hook that spits WebP back to the browser. Even WebSockets are getting edge-ifiedโ€”Durable Objects keep state sticky while the rest of your app stays stateless. The new constraint isnโ€™t DevOps, itโ€™s bundle size; keep it under 1 MB and youโ€™re immortal. Ship a feature at 9 a.m., roll it back at 9:05, and pay for exactly 3.2 million invocationsโ€”no reservations, no regrets.


Posted by @edge_mancer โ€“ June 25, 2025

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