Back in my day…
Most of us would agree that many of the business IT challenges from the early naughties, when the world was still nursing a wicked hangover from the dot-com bust, are no longer topics of concern today. Back then, if you were to launch an eCommerce business or even just a halfway decent website, you were in for some real work. Just about everything was a pain-in-the-ass. Not to mention really, really time-consuming and expensive.
Setting up multiple servers, installing and configuring tons of software (quite literally, as much of it still came on CD-ROMs), writing a shit-ton of custom code, configuring firewalls, and on and on. If you wanted content management, you would pay through the nose for commercial software that sucked (anyone remember Interwoven? Or Fatwire?) but was nonetheless really expensive, not only to buy but also to install, configure, customize, and keep running. Open source alternatives were not really a thing yet – though, admittedly, Drupal was around but then again, not really – and wouldn’t be until years later, starting with the 2005 release of WordPress and Joomla!, arguably the first viable options in this space.
License costs were just one part of the equation. Maintaining your infrastructure, including hosting environment, network connectivity, integrations, security, and so forth required a ton of “stuff” and an army of people. Designing, coding, testing, and launching your site was equally painstaking, expensive, and error-prone.
