Can you do this experiment again to see if fly fixed scaling to closeted region and starting the rest of the regions to meet flood requests? It's now 2 years later, maybe they watched this video and fixed it.
I think your reviews are a bit harsh. For instance; I would argue that it is standard to not assume that a user wants to persist a change they made via the CLI tool (just like with kubectl). Also, when it comes to the regions; I think it's is better to let the user choose the regions they care about due to a number of reasons like cost. I might want to just have 5 strategic regions to serve my users from; instead of deploying to 30+ regions. Lastly, thanks for making the video ❤.
How interesting, I see one case for small (20-80) companies that particularly have an one Ops person and a few developers, where they do not specialize in developing (landings, Wordpress, CRUD-frontends). 🎈I like it! And they need to mantain some apps for workers-company and some clients. Thanks for the video! 🦾🇦🇷
It's not about moving to another field. Technology is advancing all the time and that, among other things, means that our jobs are changing as well. In the past, you might have worked with bare metal servers, then you switched to hypervisors, then you moved directly to VMs in Cloud, then to Kubernetes with kubeadn, from there on to managed Kubernetes, etc. What we do is changing all the time and, as long as we follow those changes, we are fine. As a matter of fact, the demand was never higher than now and it seems that it will continue increasing.
What do you think of Fly.io? Do you see a use-case where it might be useful? IMPORTANT: For reasons I do not comprehend (and Google support could not figure out), TH-cam tends to delete comments that contain links. Please exclude from the links to ensure that your comments are not removed.
@@kostiscodefresh It looks interesting... The visual style is similar to the one from fly.io. It's as if it's the same company. Adding it to my TODO list...
I'm a DevOps engineer. I came from support background. Please advise me. What should I learn for better pay and better job for future. I'm afraid of jenkins but for job purpose I'm working on my weak point. Also please let me know azure devops or anything that helps me growth..
It's close to impossible to answer that question directly. Depending on a company, DevOps can mean anything. As a result, one can say that everything is in the domain of DevOps. Instead of answering your question, I suggest you tell me what you're interested in. If you can narrow the scope a bit, I will do my best to provide some recommendations.
@@DevOpsToolkit I started my career with administration background . I lik to work more on Terraform, Kubernetes,docker.. I feel go on advanced skills that pay well in market. I also wanted to learn jenkins but I'm afraid that I don't have support most of times .. I don't like programming..
@@kadapa-rl6jg The sentence "I don't like programming" tells me that you might not want to have a DevOps (or SRE) role. It assumes that you are developing (writing code). In that case, you might want to consider a more "traditional" role like sysadmin or ops. From the tooling perspective, if you are proficient with Kubernetes, you are already well off. What is "strange" is that you are comfortable with k8s but you "don't have support" for Jenkins. To begin with, k8s is much more complex than Jenkins. Further on, Jenkins is one of the tools with the most information (blogs, videos, books, etc.) available. You do not need support for it from anyone. It's out there...
This is a buildpack based paas like heroku and cloud foundry. Pricing looks good.
Can you do this experiment again to see if fly fixed scaling to closeted region and starting the rest of the regions to meet flood requests? It's now 2 years later, maybe they watched this video and fixed it.
Adding it to my to-do list...
I think your reviews are a bit harsh. For instance; I would argue that it is standard to not assume that a user wants to persist a change they made via the CLI tool (just like with kubectl).
Also, when it comes to the regions; I think it's is better to let the user choose the regions they care about due to a number of reasons like cost. I might want to just have 5 strategic regions to serve my users from; instead of deploying to 30+ regions.
Lastly, thanks for making the video ❤.
How interesting, I see one case for small (20-80) companies that particularly have an one Ops person and a few developers, where they do not specialize in developing (landings, Wordpress, CRUD-frontends). 🎈I like it!
And they need to mantain some apps for workers-company and some clients.
Thanks for the video! 🦾🇦🇷
Виктор, Молодэц!
Thanks
So if NoOps came what will happen to operation team or DevOps Engineer. How they can move to another field?
It's not about moving to another field. Technology is advancing all the time and that, among other things, means that our jobs are changing as well. In the past, you might have worked with bare metal servers, then you switched to hypervisors, then you moved directly to VMs in Cloud, then to Kubernetes with kubeadn, from there on to managed Kubernetes, etc. What we do is changing all the time and, as long as we follow those changes, we are fine. As a matter of fact, the demand was never higher than now and it seems that it will continue increasing.
What do you think of Fly.io? Do you see a use-case where it might be useful?
IMPORTANT: For reasons I do not comprehend (and Google support could not figure out), TH-cam tends to delete comments that contain links. Please exclude from the links to ensure that your comments are not removed.
Since you did fly you should also do railway dot app
@@kostiscodefresh It looks interesting... The visual style is similar to the one from fly.io. It's as if it's the same company.
Adding it to my TODO list...
I'm a DevOps engineer. I came from support background. Please advise me. What should I learn for better pay and better job for future. I'm afraid of jenkins but for job purpose I'm working on my weak point. Also please let me know azure devops or anything that helps me growth..
It's close to impossible to answer that question directly. Depending on a company, DevOps can mean anything. As a result, one can say that everything is in the domain of DevOps.
Instead of answering your question, I suggest you tell me what you're interested in. If you can narrow the scope a bit, I will do my best to provide some recommendations.
@@DevOpsToolkit I started my career with administration background . I lik to work more on Terraform, Kubernetes,docker.. I feel go on advanced skills that pay well in market. I also wanted to learn jenkins but I'm afraid that I don't have support most of times .. I don't like programming..
@@kadapa-rl6jg The sentence "I don't like programming" tells me that you might not want to have a DevOps (or SRE) role. It assumes that you are developing (writing code). In that case, you might want to consider a more "traditional" role like sysadmin or ops.
From the tooling perspective, if you are proficient with Kubernetes, you are already well off. What is "strange" is that you are comfortable with k8s but you "don't have support" for Jenkins. To begin with, k8s is much more complex than Jenkins. Further on, Jenkins is one of the tools with the most information (blogs, videos, books, etc.) available. You do not need support for it from anyone. It's out there...
@@DevOpsToolkit got it. Thankyou for your advice.. I will start working on my weak areas..
Interesting Serverless Platform