Hi @TravisMedia, Thanks for all your Tech contents. They have really helped me. I have a concern. Intro: I am a computer science final year student. I started the journey of DevOps Engineering early this year. I have mastered a couple of devOps Tools. I have no working experience neither a proper CV. What advice do you have for me ?
I don’t like to comment on videos , but as a developer I have never seen this kind of clean and understandable explanation. Thanks for your efforts. A lot of things have just clicked after this video)) subscribing
Awesome summary of what needs to be done... no beating around the bush... no self advertising... just clear road path... thanks a ton Travis...appreciate your efforts.
Notes for skill part: 1.Version control 2.Linux 3.Coding 4.agile development 5.operations 6.docker/kubernetes 7.Infrastructure as code 8.ansible 9.jenkins 10.Monitoring
10 Important Skills Should Have as a DevOps Engineer * Git * Linux * Python * AWS * Docker & KUbernetes * Terraform and Also CLoudFormation * Ansible * Jenkins * Monitoring Tool * Operations And Agile Development
I for one did not knew Kubernetes, Jenkin, Ansible and only a but about git version control, I still got accepted and learned these things while I worked in the company so it's good to have the majority of skills but you don't need to know all of them before applying to a job in DevOps engineer position
Hi Travis, I have been following your content and guides for a few months now. Your Terraform tutorial was my first steps into IaC. It inspired me to follow through on a few projects on terraform. Today I got a phone call from a very good company offering me a place on their DevOps programme. I have no developer background and have worked in IT support for 18 months after starting my IT career in my 30s. Your content is inspirational and relevant. Thank you so much.
@@estelaaletse5919 Linux was a big one they were looking for. Since starting the job terraform is very important and git also. 75% of my time so far has been on terraform. Familiarity with the command line, Linux/AWS/Azure all important. Really just having a general interest and passion for cloud work seems to have gotten me the offer as technically speaking I am behind the curve.
I love this channel. The man is so honest. He doesn’t try to jerk off his audience with feel good nonsense, e.g. “…become an info security expert and make six figures in a month.”
You forgot one very important aspect. Communication with lots of different people. As DevOps guy, you need to be able to communicate with almost every part of the organization. Especially if you are working in a larger project with lots of teams and people.
I'm trying the zero to DevOps route since I could get a role at a company interested in developing their own DevOps. I'm three months into it now and I can't say whether it's been wise or not lol atm, I am taking a toll from ALWAYS having to learn something new. But then again, such is the industry on a whole. The worst part was having to switch tools midway because of costs and having to deal with the fact that I have to relearn some stuff and kind of unutilise some of what I had learned. I have fun and most of all a lot of help from the Devs, which allows me to focus more on the ops side of things. I wish I had a better senior presence, though
Building a DevOps mindset in a traditional team is extra tough without experience in an established DevOps environment, because you need the clout and people skills to drive change in a team as well; good luck...
Developer with an interest in devops here. Have to say... Tech tubers are making technical education far more accessible than conventional education ever would. Thanks to all of you.
First of all welcome to all the new and Restarting their Career.. I have enjoyed your session Travis.. Very clear and to the point.. Yes this is only the tip of the DevOps journey. BIG thing as in any business…Learn the business, processes and Teams.. This will make your life easier on a new job.. Working with teams that have standardized processes is awesome.. but not there mostly..
It's not easier, the focus is just on more fields with less dedication to each which will be more helpful in the long run if you don't want to be stuck as developer or operator in the same type of companies every time. DevOps have more varied skills.
Thank you so much for this break down. I took notes thorough your video, and as I was going, I realized that I'm almost a DevOps engineer now at my current company and had no idea. I just need some certs and more time on some certain things and I could make this work. Your video really simplified what seemed like a mountain of things to overcome and figure out. Im going to go out and buy a whiteboard now lol.
As an Ops guy spent more time adopting Linux and work as an independent contractor. I've looked at some of the negative comments here... unfounded as they are it shows just how ignorant of the road map / tech skills stack that is required! Yes difficult to get into the space. But for me your post is 100% accurate. With 23 years of experience I've worked with Win and Open Source lately which mirrors your comment re cloud. Linux is the net and given this matches what you need to add to repertoire . Brilliant video sure to subscribe to someone who speaks my language 👍🏽
It's impressive to present things concisely, in a so comprehensive manner, that after watching that video I was already able to put puzzles together and imagine how those tools are chained with each other. Even though some of the terms I encountered for the first time. I started a course on devops one month ago, my prior experience is that I had been working with python over the past couple of months, but quickly realised one programming language is no longer enough. Then I started doing some research what fields of IT interest me the most, I directed my attention towards data analysis/devops, traditional way of starting as a junior developer, creating websites feels just boring to me, I did some projects in my free time to get an idea of how it works together, but didn't feel fulfilled at the end at all. I'd rather see websites as a mean to an end, not the goal of my work itself. Plus, I think supply exceeds demand and wages for junior developers don't differ much from the one I got in my current job (automotive industry). There's indeed quite a lot to assimilate, feels overwhelming at times, but a prospect of having a job allowing me to make a decent living, doing stuff I consider fun on a daily basis, and having, to some extent, my future secured drives me.
Hello. You still studying? Did you started any course? I am thinking to get into this but I don't know where to start. Me as a person I like learning 1 to 1 with someone and not by myself. I was wondering maybe you can teach me something that you already know. Thanks! Have a good day!
Ok so I have absolutely NO background in tech of any kind. I’m starting school this quarter for network engineering, with the end goal being devops. Videos like this make me more and more confident and excited. Thank you!
do not skip 'web development' skills Unless you already have other software engineering skills (and performed them in a job) because I haven't seen anyone go self taught ---> Dev Ops role without clearly having a job or major project history building/working on things
Trying to learn DevOps via Tech world with Nana's bootcamp, coming from OPS side, this video is awesome. As I learn, devops usually automate their selves out of a job to do the next thing, because theres always gonna be a next thing. Coding for DevOps are more of a infrastructure side of things rather than application logic. this vide is awesome i hope more similar will be released in the future.
Thanks for the insight. I do most of these things for my own projects until you got to Kubernetes. It is good to know what skills I need to work on. I also appreciated the overview of working within a team. I imagine working with a group of people toward the same goal would really elevate the learning process.
The pause after "there is also a scrum master..." Had me rolling. 😂 The scrum master truly is one of the people of all time. 😅 I've been working as a DevOps engineer for a little over 2 years and the things mentioned in this video relate very closely to my experience thus far. Great video. :)
I guess I'm in group 3. I jave no experience in IT. I literally jist decided thst i want a career as a Devops engineer. I am brand spanking new to all of this.
Interesting. Good video. I didn't make a conscious effort to learn Linux. But, funny enough, because developing in Windows (despite WSL) was such a hit and miss experience and practically ALL solutions on the Internet are Linux-based, I decided to move my personal computer to Linux and I've never looked back (for developing). It's just so much better working in the same environment your work will also work in. I've been learning all this stuff over the last couple of years and I'm so far from being an expert. But, it is also so much fun. I have a higher goal to produce a PaaS. I'd suggest to anyone who wants to learn anything, present yourself with a challenge you can relate to. Don't learn for the sake of learning, but rather to help you solve a particular problem. You'll learn the fastest. You'll become a sponge for the knowledge.
Agile is not a subset of Scrum - Scrum is an Agile framework, so it´s the other way around :) Everything else was so helpful for me as Scrum Master with no dev background, thank you :)
Thank you Travis! That was a lot of wonderful information. It was nice hear all the tech term broke down into understandable steps. You describe things very well.
I started my journey 3 months ago and edureka have made me understand alot I'm confused about even though I'm still confused but I ma still following my road map and I wish to get a mentor
Thanks a lot for this amazing content! I'm currently 41 and decided to become a DevOps. I've worked for 5 years as an IT support specialist and I already have good basics in programming. How long will it take me to be a qualified DevOps?
I am 41 too and switched from QA testing to DevOps about 5 years ago. I would suggest getting the AWS DevOps Pro Cert and the training leading to that would get you very far. Also, it is a great cert to have on your LinkedIn for recruiters ;)
Amazing video. Please accept a small correction, ELK and Splunk are logging tools and not monitoring Monitoring has tools like Prometheus, thanos, zabbix and more
Then you also have the infrastructure and systems engineers who have been working cloud infrastructure deployment and hybrid migrations from on-premises and private datacenters and now want to learn to automate a great deal of it. This is great content!
Hey Travis, thumbs up for the video, a lot of great information and you are a great presenter too. I got say it’s crazy that 170+ thousand have watched but only 5,3 thousand have given a thumbs up for the video. This is the second of your content I have watched and your stuff is good. All the best 🎉
By training I’m a full-stack oriented developer but have learned so much about CI/CD and love the process of making that connection! Even at the very base level version control through Git should be a must… surprisingly I’ve ran into developers that have been in their jobs for 5-8 years and don’t know how to use Git surprisingly
@@phucnguyen0110 if your working on local projects there’s no need to learn Git right away, but when working with a team everyone appreciates when a developer knows how to use Git properly regardless of which ever online repository service you use. Git will always come in handy :)
Best way to learn and to advance is through practice. I don't think there are shortcuts in transitioning to DevOps and you still need a decent computing background if you want to start from scratch with both Dev and Ops practices.
I like how you spent 30 seconds not starting a video where you specifically pat yourself on the back about starting videos right away. I added a new SponsorBlock segment for that section so you won't have to worry about others noticing this behavior.
Very good overview. I was hired as a Platform Engineer (same thing except I write the apps that run on the infra too) three years ago. I had to learn every technology you mentioned on the job (besides Ansible).
Loved the pause after "there is a scrum master". For bash: push hard against it and introduce another sane shell like xonsh, which is python. Have been writing thousands of lines of bash scripts in my career, don't go there, it leads to pain for everyone.
Hello Travis, I want to express my sincere gratitude for creating this video. It has truly inspired me to continue my learning journey and maintain consistency in my efforts. Your explanation of various tools, even though I may not be proficient in them yet, has provided me with valuable knowledge on how to manage them effectively. Your teaching style is simple and concise, making it accessible to anyone, regardless of their level of experience. Thanks to your video, I feel excited to embark on this journey and learn more. I've subscribed for more of your content, and I eagerly anticipate what else you have in store. Thank you once again for your invaluable contribution.
great video! I know networking, Ansible, network automation with python and Linux, based on your information and clear explanation I think I should go for the rest of the skills and try to become a devops engineer.
In modern world it looks like people have forgotten that DevOps meant to be a bridge between Devs and Operations teams, and modern DevOps engineers are slowly became new Ops. So there is no more dev and ops with devops between them, it is more like there are only devs and devops, and operations teams are not existent. So some of the tasks devops supposed to do is now done by developers(aws setups and etc.) and all of the tasks operations supposed to do are thrown at devops(monitoring, on-calls, etc.).
Hi Travis, I am 40+ years old. I worked as a test engineer (or leader) in some companies before. But I know most of the skills your mentioned because I am also interested in DevOps. Do you think it's a good idea to switch my career from testing to devops at this age? 😀
Because 1. It will break at some point 2. You’ll need to automate the next thing on the list as the company continues moving forward 3. And who else will be expected to know and do everything there 😅 I worked for a company before where we jumped from contract to contract with the goal of automating ourself out of each of them. The work kept coming.
Great video, I'm a university student and am starting my year in industry as a site reliability engineer intern, this video gives me a good base of what I need to learn, thanks!
17:27 I actually got straight to DevOps like job (not implicitly stated), so im working on small Django project + getting to know the tools of the trade. Yes i have basics but any real projects on my back Wondering why i didnt have neither Docker&K8S nor VM but all other responsibilities are within this reach
.... everybody is moving away from cloud! And then there are ... build systems, artifactories, code quality, SecOps, compliance, secret management, PKI, observability and list goes on and on... :)
I'm in Cybersecurity. I'm a security analyst and under paid. I'm not sure if I wanna continue in Cybersecurity due to how hard it is getting a job in it. I was looking at devops and just want to get a pay bump and make 55-60k a year and then work my way up into a six figure career. I want something I can learn in everyday and make a career. Where I'm at now I just look at emails all day long and mark them an attack or safe. I've learned different attacks they do but that's about it. Nothing real technical or cool just boring emails.
Check out the Travis Media Community - travis.media/community
Hi @TravisMedia,
Thanks for all your Tech contents.
They have really helped me.
I have a concern.
Intro: I am a computer science final year student. I started the journey of DevOps Engineering early this year. I have mastered a couple of devOps Tools.
I have no working experience neither a proper CV.
What advice do you have for me ?
18:53 for DevOps with no Dev experience.
You have an update?
I don’t like to comment on videos , but as a developer I have never seen this kind of clean and understandable explanation. Thanks for your efforts. A lot of things have just clicked after this video)) subscribing
Awesome summary of what needs to be done... no beating around the bush... no self advertising... just clear road path... thanks a ton Travis...appreciate your efforts.
Notes for skill part:
1.Version control
2.Linux
3.Coding
4.agile development
5.operations
6.docker/kubernetes
7.Infrastructure as code
8.ansible
9.jenkins
10.Monitoring
10 Important Skills Should Have as a DevOps Engineer
* Git
* Linux
* Python
* AWS
* Docker & KUbernetes
* Terraform and Also CLoudFormation
* Ansible
* Jenkins
* Monitoring Tool
* Operations And Agile Development
Are you DevOps Engineer?
@@riteshkokane4493 from what I’ve read online that sounds pretty stnadard
That is correct!!
Maybe replace python with go or learn it additionally
I for one did not knew Kubernetes, Jenkin, Ansible and only a but about git version control, I still got accepted and learned these things while I worked in the company so it's good to have the majority of skills but you don't need to know all of them before applying to a job in DevOps engineer position
Hi Travis, I have been following your content and guides for a few months now. Your Terraform tutorial was my first steps into IaC. It inspired me to follow through on a few projects on terraform. Today I got a phone call from a very good company offering me a place on their DevOps programme. I have no developer background and have worked in IT support for 18 months after starting my IT career in my 30s. Your content is inspirational and relevant. Thank you so much.
Congrats! And thank you for sharing this!
@@TravisMedia I completed my graduation (Bsc.comp) in school of distance education.are I eligible for IT sector ??
@@syedsaida865 Yes
Hi, can you tell the skills you have for them to offer you a place on their DevOps programme?
@@estelaaletse5919 Linux was a big one they were looking for. Since starting the job terraform is very important and git also. 75% of my time so far has been on terraform. Familiarity with the command line, Linux/AWS/Azure all important.
Really just having a general interest and passion for cloud work seems to have gotten me the offer as technically speaking I am behind the curve.
I am learning AWS currently...And within next 4-5 months i will be a DevOps 100%...i will keep updating here what i will be learning for DevOps
Read both of your comments… Good job keep going …
@@harshhooda5362good job keep up the good work
What did you do today?
@@barisdnmz I took a AWS solution architect- associate mock test and i am learning Linux.
Are you learning everything online?
I love this channel. The man is so honest. He doesn’t try to jerk off his audience with feel good nonsense, e.g. “…become an info security expert and make six figures in a month.”
There's so much to learn in this field it's unreal
What i would also add:
- some sort of service mesh: istio, linkerd, consul
- some sort of messaging queues: kafka, rabbitmq
You forgot one very important aspect. Communication with lots of different people. As DevOps guy, you need to be able to communicate with almost every part of the organization. Especially if you are working in a larger project with lots of teams and people.
Very true
It used to be the app could break or the server could break. But now, thanks to dev ops, the pipeline and automation can also break.
love how down to earth, realistic and transparent this channel is ! keep up with the good work Travis !
I'm trying the zero to DevOps route since I could get a role at a company interested in developing their own DevOps. I'm three months into it now and I can't say whether it's been wise or not lol atm, I am taking a toll from ALWAYS having to learn something new. But then again, such is the industry on a whole. The worst part was having to switch tools midway because of costs and having to deal with the fact that I have to relearn some stuff and kind of unutilise some of what I had learned. I have fun and most of all a lot of help from the Devs, which allows me to focus more on the ops side of things. I wish I had a better senior presence, though
Building a DevOps mindset in a traditional team is extra tough without experience in an established DevOps environment, because you need the clout and people skills to drive change in a team as well; good luck...
Thanks!
Your insights and descriptions work great for me and my level of understanding. Great videos, keep up the timely content.
This is what I was looking for the last few days. A full package of DevOps guide. Thanks for sharing this great info.
Did you finish learning
I just started learning Cloud and found you, unrelated, your voice is SMOOOOTH. I was surprised when I started the video.
Developer with an interest in devops here.
Have to say... Tech tubers are making technical education far more accessible than conventional education ever would. Thanks to all of you.
First of all welcome to all the new and Restarting their Career.. I have enjoyed your session Travis.. Very clear and to the point.. Yes this is only the tip of the DevOps journey. BIG thing as in any business…Learn the business, processes and Teams.. This will make your life easier on a new job.. Working with teams that have standardized processes is awesome.. but not there mostly..
I see DevOps is kinda easier then being a Developer, but at the same time there so much to this field, very exciting. Thanks for the video!
Thank You I want to start Devops class in september
@@safiatuseidu9322 have you started?
It's not easier, the focus is just on more fields with less dedication to each which will be more helpful in the long run if you don't want to be stuck as developer or operator in the same type of companies every time. DevOps have more varied skills.
Thank you so much for this break down. I took notes thorough your video, and as I was going, I realized that I'm almost a DevOps engineer now at my current company and had no idea. I just need some certs and more time on some certain things and I could make this work. Your video really simplified what seemed like a mountain of things to overcome and figure out. Im going to go out and buy a whiteboard now lol.
As an Ops guy spent more time adopting Linux and work as an independent contractor. I've looked at some of the negative comments here... unfounded as they are it shows just how ignorant of the road map / tech skills stack that is required! Yes difficult to get into the space. But for me your post is 100% accurate. With 23 years of experience I've worked with Win and Open Source lately which mirrors your comment re cloud. Linux is the net and given this matches what you need to add to repertoire . Brilliant video sure to subscribe to someone who speaks my language 👍🏽
It's impressive to present things concisely, in a so comprehensive manner, that after watching that video I was already able to put puzzles together and imagine how those tools are chained with each other. Even though some of the terms I encountered for the first time. I started a course on devops one month ago, my prior experience is that I had been working with python over the past couple of months, but quickly realised one programming language is no longer enough. Then I started doing some research what fields of IT interest me the most, I directed my attention towards data analysis/devops, traditional way of starting as a junior developer, creating websites feels just boring to me, I did some projects in my free time to get an idea of how it works together, but didn't feel fulfilled at the end at all. I'd rather see websites as a mean to an end, not the goal of my work itself. Plus, I think supply exceeds demand and wages for junior developers don't differ much from the one I got in my current job (automotive industry). There's indeed quite a lot to assimilate, feels overwhelming at times, but a prospect of having a job allowing me to make a decent living, doing stuff I consider fun on a daily basis, and having, to some extent, my future secured drives me.
Hello. You still studying? Did you started any course? I am thinking to get into this but I don't know where to start. Me as a person I like learning 1 to 1 with someone and not by myself. I was wondering maybe you can teach me something that you already know. Thanks! Have a good day!
Ok so I have absolutely NO background in tech of any kind. I’m starting school this quarter for network engineering, with the end goal being devops. Videos like this make me more and more confident and excited. Thank you!
I took a whole course in coursera for devops and still didn't get a sum-up like this. Thanks a lot!
do not skip 'web development' skills Unless you already have other software engineering skills (and performed them in a job) because I haven't seen anyone go self taught ---> Dev Ops role without clearly having a job or major project history building/working on things
Right. Going from zero to Devops is rare. Most people will have some speciality either a developer,network engineer etc then move to devops
Trying to learn DevOps via Tech world with Nana's bootcamp, coming from OPS side, this video is awesome. As I learn, devops usually automate their selves out of a job to do the next thing, because theres always gonna be a next thing. Coding for DevOps are more of a infrastructure side of things rather than application logic.
this vide is awesome i hope more similar will be released in the future.
Great video! Tbh it seems being a developer/cloud engineer seems a lot more simple than becoming a full on DevOps engineer.
Bout time someone explained this concept for basic understanding ❤
I would say to really dig deep on Python, Linux, and Networking concepts (assuming you are a newcomer).
Thanks for the insight. I do most of these things for my own projects until you got to Kubernetes. It is good to know what skills I need to work on. I also appreciated the overview of working within a team. I imagine working with a group of people toward the same goal would really elevate the learning process.
It does!
Great
Travis, i just started learning DevOps, after watching many of ur videos. I started Linux from UDEMY Imran Afzel for both Linux Admin & Bash
I have been both the dev side and ops side so this career path just makes sense for me. Thanks for explaining the path and the tools.
The pause after "there is also a scrum master..." Had me rolling. 😂
The scrum master truly is one of the people of all time. 😅
I've been working as a DevOps engineer for a little over 2 years and the things mentioned in this video relate very closely to my experience thus far. Great video. :)
You have a great teaching skill! One of the best explainers I've seen on TH-cam!
Pure knowledge, no bullshit. I like this guy.
Im trying to move from IT Operations and into DevOp(since it ops is dead). Thanks for this video!
Outstanding... I'm a noob to the industry but after this video I'm confident in my level up... Gracias Senior!!!
Helped me find what I would like to do after years of doing application developement without much satisfaction!! thanks much
Just came across this video and man you're knowledgeabl, wise, and present everything in such a humble manner. Love that! Subbed.
I guess I'm in group 3. I jave no experience in IT. I literally jist decided thst i want a career as a Devops engineer. I am brand spanking new to all of this.
Interesting. Good video. I didn't make a conscious effort to learn Linux. But, funny enough, because developing in Windows (despite WSL) was such a hit and miss experience and practically ALL solutions on the Internet are Linux-based, I decided to move my personal computer to Linux and I've never looked back (for developing). It's just so much better working in the same environment your work will also work in.
I've been learning all this stuff over the last couple of years and I'm so far from being an expert. But, it is also so much fun. I have a higher goal to produce a PaaS. I'd suggest to anyone who wants to learn anything, present yourself with a challenge you can relate to. Don't learn for the sake of learning, but rather to help you solve a particular problem. You'll learn the fastest. You'll become a sponge for the knowledge.
two minutes in and your explanations are far superior than most. thank you
unrelated topic.... you have a great speaking voice. It makes receiving information so much easier.
Agile is not a subset of Scrum - Scrum is an Agile framework, so it´s the other way around :) Everything else was so helpful for me as Scrum Master with no dev background, thank you :)
Thank you Travis! That was a lot of wonderful information. It was nice hear all the tech term broke down into understandable steps. You describe things very well.
I started my journey 3 months ago and edureka have made me understand alot I'm confused about even though I'm still confused but I ma still following my road map and I wish to get a mentor
Thanks a lot for this amazing content!
I'm currently 41 and decided to become a DevOps.
I've worked for 5 years as an IT support specialist and I already have good basics in programming.
How long will it take me to be a qualified DevOps?
I am 41 too and switched from QA testing to DevOps about 5 years ago. I would suggest getting the AWS DevOps Pro Cert and the training leading to that would get you very far. Also, it is a great cert to have on your LinkedIn for recruiters ;)
Nice
This is great thank you so much, I am a php/drupal dev and I want to switch to DevOps as soon as possible. Already know Git, linux and coding.
I learn and have a lot of fun with Travis, thank you for sharing.
20 years is crazy not to know linux or BSD. Oh love the channel!
ik this is a old video but it has been extremely helpful watching this and has literally eveyrything i was thinking of, Thanks man!!
The only DevOps explanation that has made sense.
Amazing video.
Please accept a small correction, ELK and Splunk are logging tools and not monitoring
Monitoring has tools like Prometheus, thanos, zabbix and more
true, but elastic search do have monitoring feature tho
@@harshhooda5362
Correct
Absolutely invaluable! Thank you so much travis! You are a godsend!😊
Then you also have the infrastructure and systems engineers who have been working cloud infrastructure deployment and hybrid migrations from on-premises and private datacenters and now want to learn to automate a great deal of it. This is great content!
Hey Travis, thumbs up for the video, a lot of great information and you are a great presenter too. I got say it’s crazy that 170+ thousand have watched but only 5,3 thousand have given a thumbs up for the video. This is the second of your content I have watched and your stuff is good. All the best 🎉
By training I’m a full-stack oriented developer but have learned so much about CI/CD and love the process of making that connection! Even at the very base level version control through Git should be a must… surprisingly I’ve ran into developers that have been in their jobs for 5-8 years and don’t know how to use Git surprisingly
I am honestly shocked after reading that, I guess I should learn Git properly now as I am in my 2nd year of coding
@@phucnguyen0110 if your working on local projects there’s no need to learn Git right away, but when working with a team everyone appreciates when a developer knows how to use Git properly regardless of which ever online repository service you use. Git will always come in handy :)
@@jonnyevans7652 I do work locally on my side projects as well as in a team in a conpany environment actually ^^ thank you for the reminder
Sorry I didn’t realize!
@@jonnyevans7652 no worries haha, I should learn Git properly since all I do are fetch/pull/add/commit/push anyway - very basic stuff
1:00-1:33 that’s me. Let’s get into it!
quick fix: scrum is a sub of agile not the other way around
Best way to learn and to advance is through practice. I don't think there are shortcuts in transitioning to DevOps and you still need a decent computing background if you want to start from scratch with both Dev and Ops practices.
I like how you spent 30 seconds not starting a video where you specifically pat yourself on the back about starting videos right away.
I added a new SponsorBlock segment for that section so you won't have to worry about others noticing this behavior.
Travis thank you for the video it demystifies the approach to DevOps and provides the master of the right tool.
Very good overview. I was hired as a Platform Engineer (same thing except I write the apps that run on the infra too) three years ago. I had to learn every technology you mentioned on the job (besides Ansible).
Were you working in the field already ?
That´s exactly what I was looking for to start this new path! Amazing content.
Excellent video, thanks for the information! 😊👍
It cleared all my confusion and gave me a clear path from where to start. Thank you so much.
Loved the pause after "there is a scrum master".
For bash: push hard against it and introduce another sane shell like xonsh, which is python.
Have been writing thousands of lines of bash scripts in my career, don't go there, it leads to pain for everyone.
Never heard of xonsh, will look it up.
Good stuff here! your videos help me understand DevOps very clearly, they are very usefull! thanks! I want watch more!
Hello Travis,
I want to express my sincere gratitude for creating this video. It has truly inspired me to continue my learning journey and maintain consistency in my efforts. Your explanation of various tools, even though I may not be proficient in them yet, has provided me with valuable knowledge on how to manage them effectively. Your teaching style is simple and concise, making it accessible to anyone, regardless of their level of experience. Thanks to your video, I feel excited to embark on this journey and learn more. I've subscribed for more of your content, and I eagerly anticipate what else you have in store.
Thank you once again for your invaluable contribution.
Wow this is one of the best explanations I’ve heard..very well articulated! 👍🏻
That was smooth. Just what I was looking for
great video!
I know networking, Ansible, network automation with python and Linux, based on your information and clear explanation I think I should go for the rest of the skills and try to become a devops engineer.
dear travis, this is very handy.and informative video. Additionally, you scrpted it very well and enough descriptive.
In modern world it looks like people have forgotten that DevOps meant to be a bridge between Devs and Operations teams, and modern DevOps engineers are slowly became new Ops.
So there is no more dev and ops with devops between them, it is more like there are only devs and devops, and operations teams are not existent.
So some of the tasks devops supposed to do is now done by developers(aws setups and etc.) and all of the tasks operations supposed to do are thrown at devops(monitoring, on-calls, etc.).
Scrum is actually a subset of agile. There are other agile methodologies such as Kanban.
Good video, worth a watch for everyone confused and looking to test their ambition
lol.. the way you say just learn this... just learn that. and its about 10 things to learn.. it sounded funny. loved how simple the explanation is
I find this so darn interesting I can barely contain myself...
Hi Travis, I am 40+ years old. I worked as a test engineer (or leader) in some companies before. But I know most of the skills your mentioned because I am also interested in DevOps. Do you think it's a good idea to switch my career from testing to devops at this age? 😀
Haha, I'm one of those people that jumped straight into devops. Still not too good at writing code. But automation and yaml is life.
Great video, thank you Travis.
and at least 3 years experience with large software projects plus extensive experience with azure, this is the case in australia for a junior devops
what a G you are Mr. Travis....thankyou for the information
Can you explain the impact of AI adoption on software development/ engineering? Coding?
How stable is devops? I mean lets say you automatize everything and setup a great ci/cd... what will stop the company from firing you?
Because
1. It will break at some point
2. You’ll need to automate the next thing on the list as the company continues moving forward
3. And who else will be expected to know and do everything there 😅
I worked for a company before where we jumped from contract to contract with the goal of automating ourself out of each of them. The work kept coming.
Great video, I'm a university student and am starting my year in industry as a site reliability engineer intern, this video gives me a good base of what I need to learn, thanks!
That's also what I want to be! I have worked as network delivery engineer for years.
Ok, besides your excellent insite, you have abviously been to several cookouts on the other side of town!🤜🤛You got swag myman! LOL
I pray to God , that we all go to the stone age again.
Man strong, man can move big rock...man is appreciated 👍🏼
Soon😅
This funny.
But why?
17:27 I actually got straight to DevOps like job (not implicitly stated), so im working on small Django project + getting to know the tools of the trade. Yes i have basics but any real projects on my back
Wondering why i didnt have neither Docker&K8S nor VM but all other responsibilities are within this reach
GREAT video Travis! ❤👊🏻🤘🏻
I've worked for four different companies and all of them primarily use(d) Windows Server. I guess it all depends.
Many companies expect that a Software engineer must know Devops as well.
Thank you Travis.. Great content!
.... everybody is moving away from cloud! And then there are ... build systems, artifactories, code quality, SecOps, compliance, secret management, PKI, observability and list goes on and on... :)
Thanks Travis, this came in very handy.
Very well explained! Thank you for decluttering all this knowledge
I'm in Cybersecurity. I'm a security analyst and under paid. I'm not sure if I wanna continue in Cybersecurity due to how hard it is getting a job in it. I was looking at devops and just want to get a pay bump and make 55-60k a year and then work my way up into a six figure career. I want something I can learn in everyday and make a career. Where I'm at now I just look at emails all day long and mark them an attack or safe. I've learned different attacks they do but that's about it. Nothing real technical or cool just boring emails.
How much do you make currently?
Such a genious! Very informative ❤
Very intriguing video. Travis you deserve a hug 🤗