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I'm trying to write a question to get a better understanding of what advantages an EKS cluster provides over a traditional ECS system: When should I use EKS over ECS?

However my question got closed since it was an opinionated question (which in my opinion it isn't; it's asking for factual benefits a Kubernetes cluster has over an ECS). How can I reword the question so it doesn't get closed?

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    Even if you remove the "opinion" aspects, is that question about programming? Many Kubernetes and related questions get closed as "Not about programming". Looks like it may be better suited to Server Fault. Feb 25 at 19:12
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    Questions asking for lists of things don’t tend to last very long. Too many possible answers
    – Clive
    Feb 25 at 19:13
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    Also, you would have to be sure everyone is on the same page as to what constitutes a benefit. Feb 25 at 21:01

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The fundamental purpose of your question is to make a choice between two competing options. We more or less don't do that here; the closest we get is comparing multiple code examples on an objective performance metric (runtime, big-O complexity, memory usage...).

Further, the purpose of the question is to choose between products and/or services offered by a third party (Amazon). As explained in the tag guidance for , which should have appeared to you while you were composing the question:

KUBERNETES QUESTIONS MUST BE SPECIFICALLY RELATED TO SOFTWARE DEVELOPMENT. Configuration and deployment is off-topic here. A good rule of thumb is, if it happens outside the pod, it's probably off-topic. If it's about code running inside the pod, it's probably OK.

There is nothing in this question that relates to code.

As a rule of thumb: if you can't meaningfully tag your question with the name of a programming language (or with something like or ); or if you have neither written, nor propose to write, code that is directly related to the question, do not ask it on Stack Overflow.

If you'd like it from an authoritative source:

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