All of AWS whitepapers and exam prep material about their services is like "Jargon jargon jargon, vaguely explained analogy, broad description that sound identical to about 6 other services." Well Done!
Bruh, I barely subscribe to anyone and I am 2:30 mins in and made sure I subscribed to him. I am already AWS SA certified. Came here to revise and god damn, I feel like I know nothing. This video is gold and should be paid version in YT lol
@@parlor3115 sorry, while you were responding, AWS brought out SQStretch - It's a dynamic DB Framework to Stretch your SQL ... like literally st .... retch it. :D
@@alexsmith-rs6zq sorry but i'm a former unity/c# developer and i'm really happy now to work as an animator as my feeling tell me. i don't know if this is a joke or not but i hope you have a good time, mate. cheers
I'm dealing with AWS since this year and I have to say it's troublesome if you don't know where to start, this video is golden, it gives the common grasp, the overview, that is needed to do proper Google searches to find tutorials that explain the "How" in detail. Thank you, Jeff! :)
Amazing grouping and flow. Best AWS services intro I have seen. I know there are more, but some of the commons ones people use often that someone starting might want to look at - SQS - messaging queue, step function/SWF - orchestrated workflow, VPC - isolated virtual networks, Cloudfront - CDN, Route 53 - DNS, ALB/NLB - load balancers (http layer 7 and 4 resp.) etc.
Solves my biggest gripe with mega services(Amazon, goog, Adobe) they never clearly explain what things DO on the label ; its always jargon descriptions that only mean something if your already using the thing in which case you never see the landing page anyway.
a bit off-topic, but same goes for programming and official documentation.. I can only understand it, if I already have some basis, because all of the jargon terms - it is great for a refresher of knowledge or expanding on details, but not as an entry learning materials. Here are TH-cam and interactive courses winners by far.
My "trick" to get around this is to find the HISTORY of the idea/item/service in question first. This way I can ramp up like the original users based on the need first. I will not jump into that swimming pool head first at night. I'll dip my toe and swirl it around.
Hey there! I accidentally saw this video just hours before I took CCP exam today. It was so helpful, I got questions from Lex, App Runner and some 4 more questions which I was able to answer only because of this video, which I was not aware of before. Btw, I cleared my exam, my first ever certification. Just wanted to share it here. Thanks a lot, dude.
@@bisschops99 yeah like number of features does not equal a better platform.? I would argue you're using about the same number of features no matter who you go with. I also personally prefer to not have the stuff I will never need in my way cluttering up my dashboard and adding extra documentation that I need to skip over. all clouds are basically the same, aws just covers some tiny (to the average person) edge cases.
There really isn't a need. Because AWS offers a greater range of services than Azure or GCP, so most things you find in them will have an AWS equivalent that you'll be able to easily contextualize.
This is by far the best intro video to AWS that's not trying to punt a course or waffle on aimlessly and make it seem incoherent. This is beyond brilliant - superb work !!! THANK YOU SO MUCH
Great job summarizing AWS services in a concise format! To enhance your post, consider adding a brief introduction explaining the importance of understanding these services for cloud professionals. You might also want to group the services into categories (e.g., compute, storage, networking) to make it easier for readers to digest. Additionally, including a few key use cases for some of the more popular services could provide valuable context. Keep up the excellent work in simplifying complex topics!
This is as good of a comprehensive breakdown as it gets on AWS. Learned more in 10 minutes about AWS than I would have Googling for hours. Thank you very much.
This was excellent. So many of these videos spend the first minutes with BS about the speaker’s background or favorite color or whatever. This is what. I like, no BS, just get right to it.
Absolutely fantastic video. Joining amazon this year as an SDE so they sent me an AWS course. I think they should just show us this video and call it a day!
This guy needs a RAISE! EVERY word he said in 11:45 Minutes was precious/important. I found this video just while revising, but I had to pause 30+ times as everything he said was so important. Literally is telling you hours even days tbh of study material in 11:45 minutes.
This is really great, thank you. I'd love to see this be its own series. Do similar videos for Azure and the other cloud providers, then do comparisons of, say, the top 5 or 10 features across the providers and how they differ. E.g. AWS S3 buckets vs Azure blob storage vs DigitalOcean Spaces.
I am a professional who is working on aws since 2018-19, and since some time my devs use aws, so i just wanted a quick refresh, this was a perfect video, didnt overwhelmed or anything, great job man!
I watched this video about 8 months ago and I had no idea what you were saying, but I'm about to take my CCP exam in 3 days and I reminded myself to come back to see how far I've come by watching again. Safe to say I'm feeling really confident for my exam 💪🏾
I have learnt a lot of new things that I have never worked with from your videos, like AWS, nginx, kubernetes, graphQL(and other dbs), typescript to name a few. One thing that I don't understand is how they work together. I would really love to see a video where you design a mock system using all of these (and possibly more) and explain each of their roles and why you chose it (kinda like your reverse-cloud migration video using raspberry pi). Whenever I think of a software architecture I think of them as several layers that interact with each other. However, I am unable to assign which layer what belongs to by watching a stand alone tutorial about a single tool. Btw, I am a college senior pursuing CS major and I love your content. Thanks for all the awesome contents.
Incredible offer 50% on Exam Test for AWS Certified Solutions Architect (Associate)/ Mock Test for next 5 days. So Hurry up and avail this offer. This AWS practice quiz consists of 65 questions with a mix of questions on core AWS services, including all services which are at the AWS Architect (Associate) level. Please note that, unlike the real AWS Certified Solutions Architect (Associate), so you can take as much time as required to answer each question. At the end of the test, you get to review your answers and find detailed explanations of why each answer is wrong or right along with reference links for each question. This will help you identify your strength and weaknesses. With these popular Practice Tests, you’ll know when you are ready to pass your AWS Certified Solutions Architect (Associate)/ AWS Solution Architecture Certification. URL: www.udemy.com/course/aws-solution-architecture-certification-practice-mock-test/?couponCode=AWSTPMARCH50 Coupon Code: AWSTPMARCH50
graphql is not a db. if you want a long-form video that explains how you architect software like that, I would recommend watching a MERN stack tutorial or whatever stack you are interested in, then building your own project with that stack
Great, great job giving a brief description of each service. I use maybe 7 or 8 regularly and haven’t had the time to dive further into stuff I likely won’t need but your run down conformed that this was actually the case 90% of the time but now also has me realizing that I need to dig further into a few services that seem to be a better fit for a few projects I’m currently working on. This is one of those moments that I’m glad TH-cam is around. It’s content like this that makes up for all the garbage I come across otherwise on these platforms. We appreciate you man!
Hi @Fireship, big fan. This is a great resource. Another video comparing stack of services based on their cost, and hence their relevance based on enterprise size will be mighty helpful. Thanks again!
holy smokes. its funny because i saw this video at the very beginning and i didn't understand a thing. Now i passed my aws practitioner and the way you say it it makes so much sense. thank you for this video
This should be on the AWS home page. Every time I came across a new AWS service, I would think "How is this different AWS XYZ". You just explained it succinctly .
Excellent summary ... Thank you so much! Cloud services have become so messy and complicated to navigate over the past few years, I don't know how you managed to explain 50 of them so simply in only 10min.
This video is awesome and the order you took through the offerings really flows well. Really impressive. I've been working with AWS for 10 years now and would suggest a few clarifications: 1) IAM is essential to everything that you do in AWS so even though it was mentioned I feel like that should be emphasized. 2) VPC is also essential to security, integrated with other AWS products, and encompasses another suite of sub-products of it's own (private links, vpn, etc). 3) When mentioning Cloud Formation I'd drop a line about CDK. 4) SQS is almost crucial to every asynchronous type of application you can think of and I think that service was missed. 5) There's a whole nother category for dev tools (CodeDeploy, CodePipelines, etc) but I could understand why that may have been skipped for the sake of time. Still, this was a really awesome video!
Er.... Right after posting this I recalled all the other services I use on the regular... Route53, API Gateway, ACM, CloudFront, Step Functions, Athena... You'll probably just do a part 2 video at some point 😅
unbelieveable, so much of microservices just only from 1 provider, not even mentioning gcp and azure, this is a ton for my little brain, lol, thank you so much for this (another) beautiful 100 sec vid
Super awesome, AWS crash course in minutes. I appreciate all the hard work and long hours it might have taken to weave this into a continuous script with flawless connections... Hatts Off.
By far the best and most concise explanation of these services and especially how they relate to each other and grew from simpler services. Thank you 🙏
what a explanation. it cannot be explained any better if someone just go through it they will be aware about most of the daily services. 💥💥💥 this content is dope.
@@jitpackjoyride With Amplify you can host, add databases, or connect with other AWS tools using simple commands in the command line. For example, "amplify add hosting" and then "amplify push" will host your app on AWS
this is my FAVORITE video of yours and I enjoy many others. Thanks so much. One my frustrations with getting familiar with Cloud Service Providers (Azure, AWS, etc.) is there are just so many different services (and new ones added frequently), its mind boggling just to wrap your head around it at first.
Naa, if you think setting up your own servers is the answer, do what everyone I know does: Start with AWS EC2 (the servers). Then build your shit. If/when you find you need something else, you can know AWS gots a solution. But really you can spin up 1 aws linux server, install apache, mysql (or postgres), and php/phython/ruby/node and just get to work. Then you can say, hey, I might want to have my database not on my main server for speed reasons. Then you can move your database to its own ec2, again not using anything but the most basic service. Then you can say, you know if I buy an postgres db from aws, I can save like 5 bucks a month on that secon server, then you do that.. Go on about that process for a while, and you'll end up with like 15 services running from aws. But by that time, you'll understand how they all work, because you'll grab them when you need them.
@@deidyomega a good way to learn perhaps. But in a practical sense, say you were running a semi serious project, reinventing your archtecture constantly seems like a lot of unnecessary technical debt, there's a reason things like lambda exist, so people arent wasting time developing their architecture
@@jackcollis7258 I can move an aws postgres server from localhost to a random second box to a aws hosted solution all in less than 30 minutes. And if you understand what the tech is doing, you'll have a way easier time fixing it. Its not a waste to understand what your code is doing, and how its interacting with other services. This is even more true in serious projects.
Setting up all of these services by yourself would take you your whole life. It's not at all overwhelming when you realise that you are only going to be using around 5 of these services in most cases
This is by far the best video of AWS ever on all TH-cam. Really awesome job. I love every single one of your videos, the quality is amazing. Thank you a lot Fireship.
Oracle lost the cloud race but they just don't want to admit it. All big Oracle customers are the type who'd never put their data outside their own premise for security/audit/compliance, come hell or high water.
Doing something on AWS virtually every day & I just see that huge list of services & wonder what they all are.. Now at least I know a couple more than I did! Great video :)
I'm happy you mentioned some open source alternatives as too many newer developers will just blindly use every single AWS service they can get their hands on and then lock themselves into the Amazon ecosystem forever.
I'd say I'm not a "newer developer", but still I don't understand where those newer devs get the money to play with it (unless they use aws at work, but then they probably wouldn't get access to try all this). I may even consider myself "well paid", yet I can't justify paying for AWS when I see the prices of smaller VPS providers where I can spend the same money on the whole infra as I'd spend on one AWS service (exxageration).
Just started my SAA - C02 and this is gonna be so helpful... God bless you man I'm gonna be referring to this video as a glossary of the main services. Thanks man this video was quick and informative.
I hear that alot from hobbyist on the Internet but my organisation doesn't have many SLAs with aws but for 5 yrs running our global uptime has been 99.99% with only one global outage(20 mins) and minor regional service outages here and there (mostly less that 10 mins)
I recently started learning about AWS. I am taking a course on Udemy. But there are a lot of services covered in that course. Luckily your video helped me decide which services should I focus on first.
You basically just introduced AWS' arsenal better than Amazon itself 🔥
Absolutely! Microsoft should hire him to explain their products. Especially the pricing.
Facts!
As well as GCP
I am viewing this video just before my AWS interview. Short and precise.
All of AWS whitepapers and exam prep material about their services is like "Jargon jargon jargon, vaguely explained analogy, broad description that sound identical to about 6 other services." Well Done!
At this point I should add "Subscribed to fireship" to my resume
😂😂😂
I agree
Yeah I agree
😂😂😂😂😂 true
Bruh, I barely subscribe to anyone and I am 2:30 mins in and made sure I subscribed to him. I am already AWS SA certified. Came here to revise and god damn, I feel like I know nothing. This video is gold and should be paid version in YT lol
Aws has an overwhelming amount of features and quite the hurdle for a beginner. This really helps!
there's so much products that they even got an engineering job that is essentially a retail assistant.
just a bunch of jargon obviscating corporate theft and monopolization. deserves to burn like Google and MS
@@jackdumanat49 what's the position?
90% of the services are marketing forged buzz words to describe features that already exists for 20 years.
@@facefromda704 TAMs
I'm a developer with 7 years of IT experience and that must be the most useful AWS summary I have ever watched.
“When did you become AWS certified?”
“3am last night”
Which one have you gotten?
@@Doqtorify All of them
Haha cloud practitioner ftw!
I read firestips aws papers , all of them
@@parlor3115 sorry, while you were responding, AWS brought out SQStretch - It's a dynamic DB Framework to Stretch your SQL ... like literally st .... retch it. :D
This must have taken a ton of time and effort to get done. Better introduction than any intro AWS has done themselves. Thanks!
Incroyable.
i don't even in IT/programing career path again but i still love to watch these kind of video
x2
If you have a natural curiosity in this type of thing maybe you should consider a career in web development? 🤔
@@alexsmith-rs6zq sorry but i'm a former unity/c# developer and i'm really happy now to work as an animator as my feeling tell me. i don't know if this is a joke or not but i hope you have a good time, mate. cheers
This 10 minutes video took me 30 minutes to watch. I was taking notes for each service. Hats off @Fireship!
Even for our 5 min guy it takes 10 minutes to explain all of their services 😂
And we didn't even cover 25% of AWS
@@Fireship why would anyone need all of the services that aws provides?
@@Johnny-tw5pr you are on the wrong context it seems
I swear if you create a 100 minute one to cover it all, I will watch it 😇
@@Fireship Kindly make a 1hr video explaining all the services. This will help me in my Solution architect exam
This guy simplified my week of learning and getting my AWS cloud practitioner certification in 10 minutes.
He must have just got his cert before making this video lol
Did you pass
@@TehFlushhe's now in space chilling with Bezos
I'm dealing with AWS since this year and I have to say it's troublesome if you don't know where to start, this video is golden, it gives the common grasp, the overview, that is needed to do proper Google searches to find tutorials that explain the "How" in detail. Thank you, Jeff! :)
these days I just ask chatGPT for advice :shrug:
Amazing grouping and flow. Best AWS services intro I have seen. I know there are more, but some of the commons ones people use often that someone starting might want to look at - SQS - messaging queue, step function/SWF - orchestrated workflow, VPC - isolated virtual networks, Cloudfront - CDN, Route 53 - DNS, ALB/NLB - load balancers (http layer 7 and 4 resp.) etc.
Solves my biggest gripe with mega services(Amazon, goog, Adobe) they never clearly explain what things DO on the label ; its always jargon descriptions that only mean something if your already using the thing in which case you never see the landing page anyway.
a bit off-topic, but same goes for programming and official documentation.. I can only understand it, if I already have some basis, because all of the jargon terms - it is great for a refresher of knowledge or expanding on details, but not as an entry learning materials. Here are TH-cam and interactive courses winners by far.
The video was pretty great at explaining the relationships btw the products as well.
My "trick" to get around this is to find the HISTORY of the idea/item/service in question first. This way I can ramp up like the original users based on the need first. I will not jump into that swimming pool head first at night. I'll dip my toe and swirl it around.
Hey there! I accidentally saw this video just hours before I took CCP exam today. It was so helpful, I got questions from Lex, App Runner and some 4 more questions which I was able to answer only because of this video, which I was not aware of before. Btw, I cleared my exam, my first ever certification. Just wanted to share it here. Thanks a lot, dude.
This one is awesome. Definitely need another one for Azure or GCP.
GCP +1
Lol no offence but that video would be titled "All of GCP/Azure in 100 seconds"
@@abdullahahmed7781 it is not a competition.
@@bisschops99 yeah like number of features does not equal a better platform.? I would argue you're using about the same number of features no matter who you go with. I also personally prefer to not have the stuff I will never need in my way cluttering up my dashboard and adding extra documentation that I need to skip over. all clouds are basically the same, aws just covers some tiny (to the average person) edge cases.
There really isn't a need. Because AWS offers a greater range of services than Azure or GCP, so most things you find in them will have an AWS equivalent that you'll be able to easily contextualize.
This is by far the best intro video to AWS that's not trying to punt a course or waffle on aimlessly and make it seem incoherent.
This is beyond brilliant - superb work !!!
THANK YOU SO MUCH
I felt like I had a College lecture on AWS with a time-lapse that I was thoroughly able to understand. This is magic!
0:46 lol, I like how he just casually mentions "if you happen to have a satellite orbiting the earth..."
You don't have one?!
Every javascript developer have atleast 1 satellite orbiting earth
@Rupert Tobert [Object Object] Satelite
As everyone should
console.log(sat1.lat, sat1.long, sat1.alt)
Thank you for that fantastic video. You explained everything in such a simple and lasting way that I won't struggle remembering all that.
Even though I left programming and IT industry, I still watch his videos for such a amazing content and narration...
Keep going sir.....
Why?
Thanks! Using this as an intro while preparing for my AWS interview.
Last time I was this early, fireship was as awesome as ever.
Sorry for beeing always late. JK you make greate videos!
Great job summarizing AWS services in a concise format! To enhance your post, consider adding a brief introduction explaining the importance of understanding these services for cloud professionals. You might also want to group the services into categories (e.g., compute, storage, networking) to make it easier for readers to digest. Additionally, including a few key use cases for some of the more popular services could provide valuable context. Keep up the excellent work in simplifying complex topics!
I recommend everyone to save this, no matter what experience you have in tech space as of now. This video is truly a gem.. Cheers! 🥂
This is as good of a comprehensive breakdown as it gets on AWS. Learned more in 10 minutes about AWS than I would have Googling for hours. Thank you very much.
The flow from service to service explained in such unbelievably simple terms was superb! 🔥
This was excellent. So many of these videos spend the first minutes with BS about the speaker’s background or favorite color or whatever. This is what. I like, no BS, just get right to it.
Absolutely fantastic video. Joining amazon this year as an SDE so they sent me an AWS course. I think they should just show us this video and call it a day!
Lol i just failed an Amazon interview, so here i am studying to prepare for my next interview in 6 months
@@FirstLast-gk6lg good luck with it! You got this!
@@FirstLast-gk6lg good luck!
@@FirstLast-gk6lgso did you make it ?🥹
This guy needs a RAISE! EVERY word he said in 11:45 Minutes was precious/important. I found this video just while revising, but I had to pause 30+ times as everything he said was so important. Literally is telling you hours even days tbh of study material in 11:45 minutes.
I am extremely impressed with the work you, this video really solve a huge problem of understanding aws faster
From someone that works almost exclusively on Google Cloud this was very informative. Thank you
I use AWS so we can send Bezos to space and leave him there.
I wanted to have everyone in ape suits for his return…
@@skyak4493 return to monke
you dont understand how useful this no-frills-info-jam-packed video was
This is really great, thank you. I'd love to see this be its own series. Do similar videos for Azure and the other cloud providers, then do comparisons of, say, the top 5 or 10 features across the providers and how they differ. E.g. AWS S3 buckets vs Azure blob storage vs DigitalOcean Spaces.
I would like to see this
I am a professional who is working on aws since 2018-19, and since some time my devs use aws, so i just wanted a quick refresh, this was a perfect video, didnt overwhelmed or anything, great job man!
Can you please do an overview of Azure next? There is so much to learn
I watched this video about 8 months ago and I had no idea what you were saying, but I'm about to take my CCP exam in 3 days and I reminded myself to come back to see how far I've come by watching again.
Safe to say I'm feeling really confident for my exam 💪🏾
did you pass?
@@Kelp_Brando yesssss
@@charlesngerem3198 glad to hear 😁
I have learnt a lot of new things that I have never worked with from your videos, like AWS, nginx, kubernetes, graphQL(and other dbs), typescript to name a few. One thing that I don't understand is how they work together. I would really love to see a video where you design a mock system using all of these (and possibly more) and explain each of their roles and why you chose it (kinda like your reverse-cloud migration video using raspberry pi).
Whenever I think of a software architecture I think of them as several layers that interact with each other. However, I am unable to assign which layer what belongs to by watching a stand alone tutorial about a single tool.
Btw, I am a college senior pursuing CS major and I love your content. Thanks for all the awesome contents.
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This AWS practice quiz consists of 65 questions with a mix of questions on core AWS services, including all services which are at the AWS Architect (Associate) level. Please note that, unlike the real AWS Certified Solutions Architect (Associate), so you can take as much time as required to answer each question. At the end of the test, you get to review your answers and find detailed explanations of why each answer is wrong or right along with reference links for each question. This will help you identify your strength and weaknesses. With these popular Practice Tests, you’ll know when you are ready to pass your AWS Certified Solutions Architect (Associate)/ AWS Solution Architecture Certification.
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Coupon Code: AWSTPMARCH50
Gotta just start building something. Best way to learn. Try building out the backend of a website.
graphql is not a db.
if you want a long-form video that explains how you architect software like that, I would recommend watching a MERN stack tutorial or whatever stack you are interested in, then building your own project with that stack
Every company needs YOU to explain their services/products
Great, great job giving a brief description of each service. I use maybe 7 or 8 regularly and haven’t had the time to dive further into stuff I likely won’t need but your run down conformed that this was actually the case 90% of the time but now also has me realizing that I need to dig further into a few services that seem to be a better fit for a few projects I’m currently working on.
This is one of those moments that I’m glad TH-cam is around. It’s content like this that makes up for all the garbage I come across otherwise on these platforms. We appreciate you man!
Awesome, thanks, pls keep it updating for our audience to have the latest and the greatest.
great summary of a fraction of various aws services. nice flow, well done and thanks! enjoying the content :D
Amazing video! Just watched this before my CLF-CO2 Exam!
How's your exam?
@@RahulSingh-ij2ep passed!
Can confirm before watching. It would be Awesome as always 🔥
Best 10 minutes I spent watching a TH-cam video in weeks. Nice work, sir!
Hi @Fireship, big fan. This is a great resource. Another video comparing stack of services based on their cost, and hence their relevance based on enterprise size will be mighty helpful. Thanks again!
Seriously, you are the best content creator ever! I highly appreciate this amazing piece of information.
They should hire you for the ads, segways are perfect
Everytime I watch it, I love it more.
AWS should pay for this video, btw thank you~!
holy smokes.
its funny because i saw this video at the very beginning and i didn't understand a thing. Now i passed my aws practitioner and the way you say it it makes so much sense.
thank you for this video
Damn guy, so great! Hope we can get same for Azure and GCP
MOST INCREDIBLE ONLINE TOUR OF ANY SUITE OF PRODUCTS I HAVE EVER SEEN - NO KIDDING!!!!!!
Absolutely crushed it. Keep up the great work!
This should be on the AWS home page. Every time I came across a new AWS service, I would think "How is this different AWS XYZ". You just explained it succinctly .
I love how 50+ means 51, it made me chuckle a little
Should be 50++
@@linkow Lmao I see what you did there. Nice
@@linkow 😂👍🏻
Excellent summary ... Thank you so much!
Cloud services have become so messy and complicated to navigate over the past few years,
I don't know how you managed to explain 50 of them so simply in only 10min.
This video is awesome and the order you took through the offerings really flows well. Really impressive. I've been working with AWS for 10 years now and would suggest a few clarifications:
1) IAM is essential to everything that you do in AWS so even though it was mentioned I feel like that should be emphasized.
2) VPC is also essential to security, integrated with other AWS products, and encompasses another suite of sub-products of it's own (private links, vpn, etc).
3) When mentioning Cloud Formation I'd drop a line about CDK.
4) SQS is almost crucial to every asynchronous type of application you can think of and I think that service was missed.
5) There's a whole nother category for dev tools (CodeDeploy, CodePipelines, etc) but I could understand why that may have been skipped for the sake of time.
Still, this was a really awesome video!
Er.... Right after posting this I recalled all the other services I use on the regular... Route53, API Gateway, ACM, CloudFront, Step Functions, Athena... You'll probably just do a part 2 video at some point 😅
unbelieveable, so much of microservices just only from 1 provider, not even mentioning gcp and azure, this is a ton for my little brain, lol, thank you so much for this (another) beautiful 100 sec vid
Amazon needs to create a HAL-9000 cloud service that will figure out which of the gazillion AWS products/services you will actually need to use.
I'm actually open for new career opportunities.
Super awesome, AWS crash course in minutes.
I appreciate all the hard work and long hours it might have taken to weave this into a continuous script with flawless connections... Hatts Off.
🙌 This is awesome Jeff! I love the way you simplify complex things. I’ll look forward for a GCP video like this 😎
By far the best and most concise explanation of these services and especially how they relate to each other and grew from simpler services. Thank you 🙏
Me - “hey what services do you provide?”
AWS - “yes”
what a explanation. it cannot be explained any better if someone just go through it they will be aware about most of the daily services. 💥💥💥 this content is dope.
I was literally feeling hopeless navigating through AWS management console on how to deploy my react app an hour ago
AWS Amplify is Perfect for React
@@danielstill5625 please explain
@@jitpackjoyride With Amplify you can host, add databases, or connect with other AWS tools using simple commands in the command line.
For example, "amplify add hosting" and then "amplify push" will host your app on AWS
@@jitpackjoyride If you google "aws amplify react tutorial todo app" you will find a very good tutorial.
Just create a S3 bucket, go to properties and check “Static website hosting”, enjoy.
this is my FAVORITE video of yours and I enjoy many others. Thanks so much. One my frustrations with getting familiar with Cloud Service Providers (Azure, AWS, etc.) is there are just so many different services (and new ones added frequently), its mind boggling just to wrap your head around it at first.
This is straight up overwhelming. I mean, it almost looks easier to set up my own servers.
No way bro...
Naa, if you think setting up your own servers is the answer, do what everyone I know does:
Start with AWS EC2 (the servers). Then build your shit. If/when you find you need something else, you can know AWS gots a solution.
But really you can spin up 1 aws linux server, install apache, mysql (or postgres), and php/phython/ruby/node and just get to work.
Then you can say, hey, I might want to have my database not on my main server for speed reasons. Then you can move your database to its own ec2, again not using anything but the most basic service.
Then you can say, you know if I buy an postgres db from aws, I can save like 5 bucks a month on that secon server, then you do that..
Go on about that process for a while, and you'll end up with like 15 services running from aws. But by that time, you'll understand how they all work, because you'll grab them when you need them.
@@deidyomega a good way to learn perhaps. But in a practical sense, say you were running a semi serious project, reinventing your archtecture constantly seems like a lot of unnecessary technical debt, there's a reason things like lambda exist, so people arent wasting time developing their architecture
@@jackcollis7258 I can move an aws postgres server from localhost to a random second box to a aws hosted solution all in less than 30 minutes.
And if you understand what the tech is doing, you'll have a way easier time fixing it. Its not a waste to understand what your code is doing, and how its interacting with other services.
This is even more true in serious projects.
Setting up all of these services by yourself would take you your whole life. It's not at all overwhelming when you realise that you are only going to be using around 5 of these services in most cases
Awesome explanation to get you started with AWS!
"To get JEFFs rocket up" is a fire joke
Fire joke by fireship.
Huge respect to you. Made it simpler and gave a good a historical snapshot. Well done!
Just binge watched fireship last night, here we go again
I just got my AWS Solutions Architect certification yesterday. I can confirm that this is the best run down of AWS services I’ve seen so far 🤤
Great! Can you also do the same thing with Azure and GCP?
This is by far the best video of AWS ever on all TH-cam. Really awesome job. I love every single one of your videos, the quality is amazing. Thank you a lot Fireship.
Ah, you missed some of the popular ones too: SQS, Route 53
yes! 53 is a big one. especially for ELB and such
This is better than all of AWS official explanatory videos put together. Great job.
Best Ad aws could hope for :)
This is a godsend. I finally know how to connect to my satellite, thanks bro!
I kept getting that one bug where it gets racist and starts sniping black people from space
Shift away from Oracle. That was frikin hilarious
Oracle lost the cloud race but they just don't want to admit it. All big Oracle customers are the type who'd never put their data outside their own premise for security/audit/compliance, come hell or high water.
I'm 2 min 43 seconds in and I'm amazed at how smooth this is
bravo!
Awesome video, perhaps make AWS vs google comparison?
I like that idea
This is really good refresher before the Cloud Practitioner Exam
Update version please!!!!!
Doing something on AWS virtually every day & I just see that huge list of services & wonder what they all are..
Now at least I know a couple more than I did!
Great video :)
I'm happy you mentioned some open source alternatives as too many newer developers will just blindly use every single AWS service they can get their hands on and then lock themselves into the Amazon ecosystem forever.
I'd say I'm not a "newer developer", but still I don't understand where those newer devs get the money to play with it (unless they use aws at work, but then they probably wouldn't get access to try all this). I may even consider myself "well paid", yet I can't justify paying for AWS when I see the prices of smaller VPS providers where I can spend the same money on the whole infra as I'd spend on one AWS service (exxageration).
great watch before my aws certified cloud practitioner exam. thanks a lot!
This is THE VIDEO, thanks!! :)
This video will be used frequently for quick rundowns on services I'm shopping for. Very much appreciated, thank you.
Can you make the same for Azure or Google Cloud/Firebase ♥️♥️♥️♥️
Just started my SAA - C02 and this is gonna be so helpful... God bless you man I'm gonna be referring to this video as a glossary of the main services. Thanks man this video was quick and informative.
video: ends
me: Slow claps in admiration!!!
thanks! this helped me revise my knowledge before an AWS exam
"you will pay a lot of money"
AWS: Yes, also we can't guarantee availability🤷🏻♂️
I hear that alot from hobbyist on the Internet but my organisation doesn't have many SLAs with aws but for 5 yrs running our global uptime has been 99.99% with only one global outage(20 mins) and minor regional service outages here and there (mostly less that 10 mins)
Who can though? Even my local data center only guarantees 99.9% uptime.
I took a cloud class in college using aws, and this basically summed it up in 10 mins.
And there is my gcp free tier instance forced to do everything
The struggle is real. 😂 I have ran personal containerised projects on 1 EC2 free tier with like 8 containers running on it. Bants
@@abdullahahmed7781 salam, great, what makes it below free tiers threshold ?
Thank you very much for making all those icons a little less scarier.
Hilarious first 3 seconds.
It "comes" full circle in the final 10 seconds
@@Fireship I didn't even notice that 😂😂
I recently started learning about AWS. I am taking a course on Udemy. But there are a lot of services covered in that course. Luckily your video helped me decide which services should I focus on first.
You should get a front seat in the rocket that "is" returning to earth.