Hyper Journal.
Insights into infrastructure, regional digital sovereignty, and the future of enterprise cloud in Central Asia.
Hyper App Launches First Enterprise Public Cloud in Uzbekistan
Hyper App officially launched the first enterprise-grade public cloud in Uzbekistan, offering 99.999% uptime and performance benchmarks 2.7x faster than global competitors.
Startup of the Year: Hyper App Wins at ICTWEEK 2025
At the ICTWEEK 2025 ceremony in Tashkent, Hyper App was named Startup of the Year by IT-PARK Uzbekistan — recognised for technical quality, reliability record, and contribution to the country's Digital 2030 agenda.
Case Study: Building High-Performance Infrastructure with Lenovo
A technical deep dive into how our Lenovo ThinkAgile HX deployment delivers 2.7× compute throughput vs. AWS m6i instances — and what that means in practice for banking and e-commerce clients.
New Sovereign Cloud Capacity in Kyrgyzstan
Hyper App extends its sovereign cloud infrastructure to Bishkek — the first step in a regional network giving Central Asian businesses access to local, compliant, enterprise-grade cloud without routing data through foreign jurisdictions.
Why Uzbekistan Companies Overpay for AWS — And What To Do About It
Egress fees, currency exposure, Law 213 compliance overhead, and support tiers that don't answer. We break down exactly where the hidden costs accumulate — and how clients are cutting total cloud spend by 47%.
How We Migrate Clients in 24 Hours — Without Losing a Single Byte
A detailed walkthrough of our migration playbook: discovery, rehearsal, cut-over, and rollback. By the time we start the actual switch, we've already run the migration once in staging and verified the result.
Cloud vs. On-Premise in 2026: The Real Cost for a 50-Person Business
We modelled the full five-year TCO for a typical Uzbek company — hardware, power, cooling, IT salaries, warranty, and downtime risk — using local market prices. The five-year gap is $389,000.
Uzbekistan Law No. 213: What It Means for Your Cloud Infrastructure
Law No. 213-II requires personal data of Uzbek citizens to be stored on servers physically inside Uzbekistan — regardless of where your company is incorporated. Here is what compliant architecture looks like, and the most common non-compliant pattern companies use accidentally.
Managed PostgreSQL vs Self-Hosted: The Real Trade-Offs
Self-hosted PostgreSQL requires 0.3–0.5 FTE of SRE time to operate correctly — WAL archiving, Patroni failover, OS patching, connection pooling. We break down when managed saves you money and when self-hosting is the right call.
How to Choose a Cloud Provider in Central Asia: A Practical Checklist
A 10-factor evaluation checklist for CTOs and procurement teams: latency to Tashkent users, Law 213 compliance, egress pricing, SLA credit terms, hardware generation, and more — with specific numbers to compare.
5 Signs Your Business Has Outgrown Shared Hosting
Page loads over 3 seconds, connection limit errors, failed security audits — these are not random technical issues. They are structural symptoms of shared hosting at its limits. Here is what to look for and what to do next.
Kubernetes in Production: When It Helps and When It Gets in Your Way
Kubernetes solves real problems at scale — but operating a cluster requires 0.5–1 dedicated SRE. We lay out exactly when K8s is the right call, when simpler alternatives serve you better, and what managed Kubernetes changes.
Disaster Recovery for Cloud Infrastructure: A Step-by-Step Guide
RTO, RPO, and the three DR tiers explained with real architecture implications. How to calculate the right tier for each system, write a runbook that works under pressure, and test your DR plan before you need it.
Data Residency in Central Asia: Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Kazakhstan Compared
Three countries, three data localisation laws — each with different requirements and enforcement maturity. What regional businesses need to know about storing personal data across Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan, and Kazakhstan.
Object Storage vs Block Storage: Which Does Your App Actually Need?
Block storage for databases, object storage for media. The difference is not just technical — 10TB on block costs $1,000–1,500/month vs $200–500 on object storage. We map the correct choice for every workload type.
Page Speed and Revenue: Why Every 100ms Costs Uzbek E-Commerce Real Money
A typical Uzbek e-commerce site on AWS Frankfurt has 150–250ms TTFB from Tashkent and 3–5 second page loads. We calculate the revenue impact and show the five optimisation steps that have the most effect.
99.9% vs 99.99% vs 99.999% Uptime: What the Numbers Actually Mean
99.9% allows 8 hours 45 minutes of downtime per year. 99.999% allows 5 minutes 15 seconds. We translate the numbers into real downtime budgets, explain what architecture each tier requires, and show how to choose based on your actual cost of downtime.
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