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The Last Migration: Retiring Legacy Systems for Good
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235274990
- EAN9798235274990
- Date de parution08/07/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
Every organization has one: the system nobody wants to touch, the one that was supposed to be replaced years ago, still quietly running because "temporary" turned permanent. Most books on legacy modernization stop at the exciting part - the kickoff, the new architecture, the migration plan. This one starts where those end. The Last Migration is a strategic playbook for engineering leaders, architects, and the engineers quietly holding a decade-old system together, built around the part of the process almost nobody writes about: actually finishing.
Inside, you'll find a framework for diagnosing whether a system is truly legacy, riddled with technical debt, or just cluttered with cruft - and why the wrong diagnosis wastes fortunes. You'll learn how to build a business case a skeptical CFO will actually fund, navigate the office politics that quietly kill more migrations than bad architecture ever does, and sequence an exit that doesn't collapse under its own hidden dependencies.
The final chapters tackle what almost no other resource does: the real mechanics of decommissioning - data retention, contract wind-down, the irreversible point of no return - and how to build a culture where retiring systems becomes routine instead of heroic. If you're tired of migrations that never quite end, this is the book that helps you finish one for good.
Inside, you'll find a framework for diagnosing whether a system is truly legacy, riddled with technical debt, or just cluttered with cruft - and why the wrong diagnosis wastes fortunes. You'll learn how to build a business case a skeptical CFO will actually fund, navigate the office politics that quietly kill more migrations than bad architecture ever does, and sequence an exit that doesn't collapse under its own hidden dependencies.
The final chapters tackle what almost no other resource does: the real mechanics of decommissioning - data retention, contract wind-down, the irreversible point of no return - and how to build a culture where retiring systems becomes routine instead of heroic. If you're tired of migrations that never quite end, this is the book that helps you finish one for good.





