Grabbed your course on Udemy. I did your other one after seeing some of your videos on here and really liked it. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and helping us noobs out.
Hi bro. Could you please tell me if your courses on RUclips on Linux system administrator are relevant for training in 2023? After mastering Linux, the administrator wants to continue learning devops, can you suggest training material (course, RUclips video material) for learning devops and aws ??
The very first thing I look at on a Udemy course is how long the course is. No course can be too long as I can always jump to the parts I want. I don't have your course but I can't imagine it's too detailed considering the entire course is only 1 hour long. I don't know but I find Packer has a lot to it and a 1 hour course has to be missing a lot of information.
This course doesn't try to be everything to everyone -- it's designed to get people started in a focused way, with a small, specific project. Some people prefer a more encyclopedic approach -- they want all the theory, all the features, and 16 hours of video. If you learn better that way, that's fine! But you're right, this course is not that.
Hi @tutoriaLinux, I have been learning about DevOps, K8s, Distributed Systems, Golang, Platform Engineering and many more cool tools since 1.5 years now. I am self taught and everything I have learnt or trying to learn is all from free sources that were available for free on the internet. I have been a mentee for 3 months under one of my mentors "Gerald Yerden" who works with the Hashicorp Waypoint team. I have also worked as a Golang & DevOps Intern at Rehicle where I helped setup Infrastructure using Kubernetes and Terraform and built several microservices using Golang. All of this lead me to think that I am confident enough to start applying my learnings in a professional environment and create some real world impact. I applied to thousands of positions that I thought were a 1000% match with my stack and interests. But, I haven't got any positive responce and I just don't know why. I really look at you as a strong hope, would you please help me ? I would be really very grateful to you. Thank You
My advice would be to work with a recruiter. They can usually get a feel for where things are going wrong pretty quickly and can give you advice to fix whatever is going wrong. I can't say for sure, but I'm guessing your resume and cover letter aren't doing the trick -- I'm not sure how you could even apply to thousands of companies, with a mostly-custom cover letter that demonstrates that you actually did some research on the company, unless you were doing these applications over the course of years. I'd also advise you to look into local meetups and to lean heavily into your network. If a friend works at a tech company, maybe they can vouch for you and get your resume looked at. I hope that helps you (and anyone else reading this comment). Cheers!
Looking for any Linux expert to assist me. I installed Linux Mint in a VirtualBox on Windows 10. Everything works great except a very odd thing that apparently nobody in the world has. I have searched for days and can't find a single instance of it happening anywhere else from the search engines and sites I can find. I have 3 browsers installed. Firefox which came with the distro. Brave which I installed. and Chrome for testing. I have checked all my browser settings and such and can't figure it out. Problem: I am unable to get to Amazon.com in Brave or Firefox. Brave indicates it is not secure. Even after disabling all shields. It works perfectly fine in Chrome. Here is the catch though, I am using Brave in my Windows 10 with the EXACT same settings and it works fine. So with it working in Windows 10 with same settings, it kind of rules out a browser issue. But it does work in Chrome on Linux. Hmm, But if it works in Chrome on Linux and not in Brave or Firefox, doesn't that rule out a Linux issue? So confused. Driving me nuts that I can't get to Amazon.com and that is the ONLY website I have found that doesn't work in these browsers. Anyone have any clues?
the problem with linux is that the programmers want their egos satisfied, that's it, if they would work together, instead of trying to do it better, linux would be 100 times better then anything, every gaming place would use it. imagine putting 25 of the best linux programmers together just for games on linux, for a year, in a fun amazing office/home? collaborating creatively, even create something for linux that gamer creators could easily use? even have gaming studios have their own servers? people having their own servers? servers are a computer!
Course Links:
Udemy: www.udemy.com/course/practical-packer-learn-hashicorp-packer-with-a-real-project/?referralCode=8C43A58B4A102EED5785
Skillshare: www.skillshare.com/classes/Hands-on-Packer-a-Practical-Introduction-to-Building-Machine-Images-on-AWS/1353540041
Love your content, man! Keep it comin'!
Grabbed your course on Udemy. I did your other one after seeing some of your videos on here and really liked it. Thanks for sharing your knowledge and helping us noobs out.
Good to see you back dude
Checking it out today Dave on Udemy. 👍
could you do tutorials on taskfile and just ?
Hey, good timimg! Gonna check this out thank you!
Hi bro. Could you please tell me if your courses on RUclips on Linux system administrator are relevant for training in 2023? After mastering Linux, the administrator wants to continue learning devops, can you suggest training material (course, RUclips video material) for learning devops and aws ??
Hi David.
Is your Udemy Wordpress course up-to-date?
I'd like to buy it but wanted to know that before.
Thanks!
The very first thing I look at on a Udemy course is how long the course is. No course can be too long as I can always jump to the parts I want. I don't have your course but I can't imagine it's too detailed considering the entire course is only 1 hour long. I don't know but I find Packer has a lot to it and a 1 hour course has to be missing a lot of information.
This course doesn't try to be everything to everyone -- it's designed to get people started in a focused way, with a small, specific project. Some people prefer a more encyclopedic approach -- they want all the theory, all the features, and 16 hours of video. If you learn better that way, that's fine! But you're right, this course is not that.
Hi @tutoriaLinux,
I have been learning about DevOps, K8s, Distributed Systems, Golang, Platform Engineering and many more cool tools since 1.5 years now.
I am self taught and everything I have learnt or trying to learn is all from free sources that were available for free on the internet.
I have been a mentee for 3 months under one of my mentors "Gerald Yerden" who works with the Hashicorp Waypoint team.
I have also worked as a Golang & DevOps Intern at Rehicle where I helped setup Infrastructure using Kubernetes and Terraform and built several microservices using Golang.
All of this lead me to think that I am confident enough to start applying my learnings in a professional environment and create some real world impact.
I applied to thousands of positions that I thought were a 1000% match with my stack and interests. But, I haven't got any positive responce and I just don't know why.
I really look at you as a strong hope, would you please help me ? I would be really very grateful to you.
Thank You
My advice would be to work with a recruiter. They can usually get a feel for where things are going wrong pretty quickly and can give you advice to fix whatever is going wrong.
I can't say for sure, but I'm guessing your resume and cover letter aren't doing the trick -- I'm not sure how you could even apply to thousands of companies, with a mostly-custom cover letter that demonstrates that you actually did some research on the company, unless you were doing these applications over the course of years.
I'd also advise you to look into local meetups and to lean heavily into your network. If a friend works at a tech company, maybe they can vouch for you and get your resume looked at.
I hope that helps you (and anyone else reading this comment). Cheers!
Bought it
come back to YT plz
I will! Planning some videos right now. Can't believe it's been almost a year.
Looking for any Linux expert to assist me. I installed Linux Mint in a VirtualBox on Windows 10. Everything works great except a very odd thing that apparently nobody in the world has. I have searched for days and can't find a single instance of it happening anywhere else from the search engines and sites I can find.
I have 3 browsers installed. Firefox which came with the distro. Brave which I installed. and Chrome for testing. I have checked all my browser settings and such and can't figure it out.
Problem: I am unable to get to Amazon.com in Brave or Firefox. Brave indicates it is not secure. Even after disabling all shields. It works perfectly fine in Chrome. Here is the catch though, I am using Brave in my Windows 10 with the EXACT same settings and it works fine. So with it working in Windows 10 with same settings, it kind of rules out a browser issue. But it does work in Chrome on Linux. Hmm, But if it works in Chrome on Linux and not in Brave or Firefox, doesn't that rule out a Linux issue? So confused. Driving me nuts that I can't get to Amazon.com and that is the ONLY website I have found that doesn't work in these browsers.
Anyone have any clues?
the problem with linux is that the programmers want their egos satisfied, that's it, if they would work together, instead of trying to do it better, linux would be 100 times better then anything, every gaming place would use it. imagine putting 25 of the best linux programmers together just for games on linux, for a year, in a fun amazing office/home? collaborating creatively, even create something for linux that gamer creators could easily use? even have gaming studios have their own servers? people having their own servers? servers are a computer!
I'm your 69th like. Giggity.