7 Evils in Cloud Migration and Greenfield Projects

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A guide to conquering cloud migration challenges

Towards Data Science
Pandora’s Box in Cloud Migration Projects
“Despite warnings, Pandora was curious, and she opened the jar, releasing the evils of the world — leaving only hope trapped inside.” [Photo by Bailey Heedick on Unsplash]

Pandora, the first mortal woman, was created by the gods as part of Zeus’s plan to punish humanity for Prometheus’s theft of fire [1].

She was gifted with beauty and intelligence, and Zeus sent her to Epimetheus, Prometheus’s brother. For the wedding gift, Zeus gave Pandora a jar (often interpreted as a “box”) and warned her never to open it [1].

Despite warnings, Pandora was curious. She opened the jar, releasing the world’s bringers of evilsleaving only hope trapped inside [2].

Since then, “to open a Pandora’s Box” has been synonymous with doing or starting something that will cause many unforeseen problems [3].

Comparing this to my professional life, the only occasion I felt like I had opened “Pandora’s Box” was when I began working on a data cloud migration/greenfield project several years ago.

And the funny thing is that this thought hasn’t changed years later, even after working on two additional and almost identical projects.

Not only did I experience new “bringers of evil” with every new data cloud migration project, but I also