No. This is only true if you have a script you run once an hour or so.
If you have a server side application that you hope to be successful then the code will be running all the time and you will pay the price literally because cloud hosting services charge for CPU and RAM usage, which will be off the charts if your server is in Python.
Not to mention all the time you will spend firefighting the performance issues that will inevitably arise. Which also literally costs money in terms of developer salaries and opportunity cost (you can't spend that time to develop new features).
> If you have a server side application that you hope to be successful then the code will be running all the time and you will pay the price literally because cloud hosting services charge for CPU and RAM usage, which will be off the charts if your server is in Python.
Your hosting fees are a tiny fraction of your expenses. Development time is worth a lot more.
> Not to mention all the time you will spend firefighting the performance issues that will inevitably arise. Which also literally costs money in terms of developer salaries and opportunity cost (you can't spend that time to develop new features).
Scaling is a nice problem to have. If you get to the point where you actually need to improve performance, you'll be able to afford to spend time on it.
> Your hosting fees are a tiny fraction of your expenses.
Only when your requirements are low.
Things get very expensive when you start requiring real performance.
> Scaling is a nice problem to have. If you get to the point where you actually need to improve performance, you'll be able to afford to spend time on it.
You don't know that. If you're a startup, it's very likely that you're still not profitable at that point.
If you have a server side application that you hope to be successful then the code will be running all the time and you will pay the price literally because cloud hosting services charge for CPU and RAM usage, which will be off the charts if your server is in Python.
Not to mention all the time you will spend firefighting the performance issues that will inevitably arise. Which also literally costs money in terms of developer salaries and opportunity cost (you can't spend that time to develop new features).