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@ -64,19 +64,6 @@ into your containers, and import Heroku apps into fly.io without having to
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rebuild them. This is what the Dogwood stack should have been. This represents a
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generational leap in the capabilities of what a Platform as a Service can do.
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Even more critical is that every app gets its own static IP address that you can
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use for IP based firewall rules. This is something that was straight up
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impossible in Heroku due to Heroku being a reseller of AWS, but since fly.io
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owns their own infrastructure and IP space, they can do this with ease. Your
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applications can be reached on a predictable IP and they will have outgoing
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connections with the same IP.
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<xeblog-conv name="Numa" mood="delet">This is amazingly useful when dealing with
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well-intentioned but outmoded security teams at companies you are integrating
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with that insist that you absolutely must have a static IP for a service. No
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more having to make ad-hoc SSH proxies or use some shady HTTP proxy as a
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service. You just make connections and they just work.</xeblog-conv>
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The stream VOD in the footer of this post contains my first impressions using
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fly.io to try and deploy an app written with [Deno](https://deno.land) to the
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cloud. I ended up creating a terrible CRUD app on stream using SQLite that
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