You know what's funny, I shifted from front end developer to back end developer because of how complex front end ecosystem has gotten since past 5 years, now I am seeing the same thing in the backend. Very soon the companies won't say backend, frontend or fullstack, they will probably say "We need 10 people who can work like an entire IT department"
Terraform isn't a configuration manager in a traditional sense. It handles the state of infra (IaC) while CMs ensure the config of whatever was created (VMs, networking, files/folders, packages, etc.) is consistent or idempotent across bare metal or virtual servers. cf. "Ansible vs. Terraform Demystified" on Ansible's official site. A fairer comparison is TF vs. Pulumi vs. CDK. Then Ansible vs. Chef vs. Puppet vs. Saltstack. Otherwise spot on. Thanks for the video!
That is really weird for them to lump TF in with Puppet and Ansible, like technically yeah you could do some config management with it but at it's core it's IaC
Good day Mr Travis, I sincerely hope you see this message, please, can you list what has changed or could be changed in your step by step guide to being a DevOps for 2024 aspirants. What has changed since the last video in 2023 and what enthusiasts should focus on...I hope this makes sense
kubernetes no longer requires docker or vice versa so knowledge of container runtime interface and working knowledge of containerd is more than enough and cli of container d is similar to docker , kubernetes got rid off fluff of docker with container runtime interface
Hello, asking for help and advice. Thanks in advance! I went thru an SRE/DevOps (using java and gcp) boot camp that got me a working knowledge of most of the tools you mentioned at the top of the lists. Bootcamp landed me a job for a year w a consultant company that never got me a project. During my time (and w no prior knowledge or experience), i got aws SAA certified in about 4 months and java 1. Had to stop studying for a couple months but my next cert is cka, then terraform. I have an engineering degree but not in CS/IT and very minimal working java/linux coding in knowledge. Honestly, looking for someone to tell me if im on the right path or a job opportunity wouldnt hurt either 😂 but for real, i appreciate any and all the help!
Cka is for managing kubernetes, it would give you a pretty good idea about how kubernetes works and if you wanna use it with Amazon then a few months of exposure with Amazon's kubernetes services would be enough ..
Maybe I should have picked another career field. I've heard basecamp made something simpler to work with than Kubernetes? Maybe companies could use that instead.
You have great videos, Travis! But I'm not gonna lie, your community's name isn't a great one. It's like a positive reinforcement of a negative term, as if accepting it, but I hope I'm wrong and that it works out!
This is how I narrow down which technology I'm going to perfect. I go to the company that I want to work for and look at the technology that they are using. In my case... Universal Studio Orlando. They use Terraform. That's what I'm studying. NOTHING ELSE! LOL TOO MANY GOSH DARN tools out here
Can we just take a moment to appreciate this guy's effort in regularly keeping us up-to-date with the latest tech trends?
Yes
Yes, indeed!! He is precious!!! Thank you deeply Travis! God bless you for everything you do for us!! 🤗😘🙏🙏🙏🙏
You know what's funny, I shifted from front end developer to back end developer because of how complex front end ecosystem has gotten since past 5 years, now I am seeing the same thing in the backend. Very soon the companies won't say backend, frontend or fullstack, they will probably say "We need 10 people who can work like an entire IT department"
Literally, this.
Backend has always been like this we just have nicer tools now. Frontend on the other hand 🤮
Terraform isn't a configuration manager in a traditional sense.
It handles the state of infra (IaC) while CMs ensure the config of whatever was created (VMs, networking, files/folders, packages, etc.) is consistent or idempotent across bare metal or virtual servers.
cf. "Ansible vs. Terraform Demystified" on Ansible's official site.
A fairer comparison is TF vs. Pulumi vs. CDK.
Then Ansible vs. Chef vs. Puppet vs. Saltstack.
Otherwise spot on. Thanks for the video!
Thanks for the clarity
That is really weird for them to lump TF in with Puppet and Ansible, like technically yeah you could do some config management with it but at it's core it's IaC
I am all for job statistics, tech market trends, and the way travis can break down these concepts. Subscribed!
In my company we are organising an optional training for Kubernetes for all devs
Good day Mr Travis, I sincerely hope you see this message, please, can you list what has changed or could be changed in your step by step guide to being a DevOps for 2024 aspirants. What has changed since the last video in 2023 and what enthusiasts should focus on...I hope this makes sense
Unc you have got one of the best Tech TH-cam channels. So mature and highly detailed 👍🏿
Thank you so much! As a beginner, this was very helpful
Thanks. I am in early stage of learning Graphana, hope it helps for job search too.
Docker should not be included in the table, if you don't know docker do not use k8s and it applies backwards
totally misunderstood the title of this video. 🤪
I was expecting to find out the current number of running pods, number of restarts, etc
Where or which site are the statistics from? I’m truly interested.
Glad im transitioning from a full-stack dev to a devops engineer so i'll have all these skills in my toolset
We embedded developers see precious little for us in Kubernetes. Change my mind?
kubernetes no longer requires docker or vice versa so knowledge of container runtime interface and working knowledge of containerd is more than enough and cli of container d is similar to docker , kubernetes got rid off fluff of docker with container runtime interface
Thanks a lot Travis. Your analysis on the DevOps market really helps to keep oneself updated on the latest trends. Thanks again!
Hello, asking for help and advice. Thanks in advance! I went thru an SRE/DevOps (using java and gcp) boot camp that got me a working knowledge of most of the tools you mentioned at the top of the lists. Bootcamp landed me a job for a year w a consultant company that never got me a project. During my time (and w no prior knowledge or experience), i got aws SAA certified in about 4 months and java 1. Had to stop studying for a couple months but my next cert is cka, then terraform. I have an engineering degree but not in CS/IT and very minimal working java/linux coding in knowledge. Honestly, looking for someone to tell me if im on the right path or a job opportunity wouldnt hurt either 😂 but for real, i appreciate any and all the help!
Travis, , to work on EKS & AKS in Devops job, which certification is more apt for Devops engineers . CKAD or CKA ?
Cka is for managing kubernetes, it would give you a pretty good idea about how kubernetes works and if you wanna use it with Amazon then a few months of exposure with Amazon's kubernetes services would be enough ..
@@ManiBalajiC which should I learn 1st ? CKA or CKAD ?
CKA will give you the foundation and it crosses over with CKAD... I find that at the very least half the things required in CKAD are part of the CKA.
@@manojkumar-jt3fw ckad is mostly for developer from what I know ... Cka first and then ckas if you into cka administration
@@Taddy_Mason Can i do CKAD 1st, and then CKA ?
Thank you. It was very complet.
Maybe I should have picked another career field. I've heard basecamp made something simpler to work with than Kubernetes? Maybe companies could use that instead.
Why is that you want to change field?
Have you forgot to tell us about the salaries ? :)
Awesome as always!
Thank you for this video.
The Travis Joke was good 😁🤘🏻
Thank you Travis 😊
Which jobs suitable after cka and cks certificate ... Please reply on my comment
After both of those, any job with Kubernetes experience as a requirement.
it's like watching a horror movie. Learn this... learn that... stop it!
Awesome content as alway my man
really appreciated!
Subscribed! Good stuff.
293 is not a lot of jobs
relative to what?
@@TravisMedia the amount of unemployed devs 😪
You have great videos, Travis! But I'm not gonna lie, your community's name isn't a great one. It's like a positive reinforcement of a negative term, as if accepting it, but I hope I'm wrong and that it works out!
Thanks I appreciate the feedback.
CKA
CKA is the way
JESUS SAID: "I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me." John 14:6❤
This is how I narrow down which technology I'm going to perfect. I go to the company that I want to work for and look at the technology that they are using. In my case... Universal Studio Orlando. They use Terraform. That's what I'm studying. NOTHING ELSE! LOL TOO MANY GOSH DARN tools out here