The Edge Isn't a Place — It's an Operating Reality
The mental model you start with determines every architecture decision that follows. Most teams are starting with the wrong one. Edge computing used to mean "some devices send telemetry to the clou...

Source: DEV Community
The mental model you start with determines every architecture decision that follows. Most teams are starting with the wrong one. Edge computing used to mean "some devices send telemetry to the cloud." That era is over. This is a re-post of Bruno Baloi's blog Part 1: The Edge Isn't a Place - It's an Operating Reality on Synadia.com. Today's edge is a full operational domain where the physical world meets software systems: machines, vehicles, gateways, sensors, factories, field deployments. And once you move compute and messaging into that world, the rules change fast. Connections drop. Environments get hostile. Data gets generated faster than it can be forwarded. And the assumptions baked into a decade of cloud-native architecture patterns start failing in ways that are hard to diagnose because they fail quietly. The first and most important shift is not a technical one, it's a conceptual one. The edge is not a far-away part of your system. It's a different operating dimension entirely.