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I’ve been working as a Cloud Engineer for 6+ years. Focused a lot on migrating workloads to the Cloud and transforming them to become Cloud Native.
In the meantime I got 7x AWS Certified
Ask Me Anything (AMA) on the Cloud and I’ll try to do my best to answer your questions 😄
The easiest way is by using Infrastructure as Code. Some great tools that allow you to easily replicate environments:
- CloudFormation
- Terraform
- CDK twitter.com/rmcomplexity/status/1359592331922583554
Best is a little subjective in this case. I started off with CloudFormation and it’s pretty easy to read because of the yaml format. If you’re more comfortable with programming, I would really recommend to go with AWS CDK. twitter.com/TheAngryTech/status/1359590868370395137
For public activities:
- Technical blog posts
- Open source contributions
- Certifications
Stuff that I build for my clients are mostly under NDA (can’t be shared publicly), but during a tech interview you can explain the concepts of what you applied to show your experience. twitter.com/a_t_e_i_i_/status/1359594154297327618
If there is enough demand in your area for only serverless, then go serverless!
Ops will eventually get obsolete, so if you don’t have to work on it then you can skip it. But the truth is that most companies are still migrating to the cloud, so don’t expect all in on serverless twitter.com/MoeBrueC/status/1359595427675447296
- VPC & EC2, the company I worked for found a client who wanted to migrate “as is” to AWS. I learned a lot on what not to do 😂
- Lambda because of its versatility / CDK because I love to build infra using code.
- Yes, Azure a little bit and GCP a tiny bit twitter.com/johanrin/status/1359595921017868288
Not as important as Cloud Certifications. Currently there is huge demand for Cloud Skills and one way of filtering the right people for the job is by having a cloud certificate. Nevertheless it’s a great benefit if you also have linux skills. twitter.com/maxbuijsman/status/1359594512260231169
- CloudWatch
- Depends on requirements, most common scenario: CDN + ALB + ASG + Elastic Cache + Multi-AZ
- Find out what your workload can handle (do load-tests) and monitor your environment to discover the thresholds and setup metrics for that to handle the autoscaling twitter.com/mindofcreator/status/1359605544546234368
1. I’m not so sure it that’s necessarily better. Consider it just a role name, officially I’m a consultant because I work at a consultancy company with many clients. But I get my hands “dirty” by building stuff so I call myself Cloud Engineer.
2. Nope t.co/jFYcfyOnLx
Depending on the use case and scope, customer with small budget and timeline with a DTAP environment - Test against real infra on DTA.
Customer with big budget and timeline (enterprise) mock and unit tests integrated in pipelines. twitter.com/loujaybee/status/1359614122820780033
I can only speculate on this, but I see more services transitioning to a managed counterpart. This means regular OPS becomes obsolete over time since you can deploy services without having to manage the underlying infra. We will see more of this in the future. twitter.com/Rich1nEs/status/1359720629562392577
Wait until the certification almost expires and then schedule a new exam. My strategy is to have some space in between the exams so they don’t all expire on the same time.
You see some people getting 5+ certificates in 6 months. This means you’ll get busy when they expire 😂 twitter.com/rajaseelan/status/1359652304950079491
I would assume you mean full stack on-prem. Get familiar with the Cloud native counterparts:
- Network: VPC (peering), ACL’s, Subnets, Direct Connect, TGW, CGW, AZ’s, RT, NatGW etc.
- Security: SG, IAM, KMS, CloudTrail, GuardDuty, Inspector, WAF, Shield.
- Storage: EBS, EFS, S3 twitter.com/Scott_TAMC/status/1359750025077813254
The answer depends heavily on the size of your data and how fast you want to transfer it to AWS (this is unknown for me). But two common scenarios:
- Snowball edge (80TB Storage) when you’re limited in bandwidth
- Direct Connect (max: 10Gbps per connection) when not limited. twitter.com/MC_MiguelRios/status/1359696380864811009
There isn’t really a “best” career path. If you’re already a data engineer, you can apply the same skillset but the underlying platform changes. This means you need to focus on getting familiar with Cloud Concepts. twitter.com/crypProphet/status/1359764690583306246
Certifications are primarily effective for the first impression, meaning you get invited to a Tech interview faster. However… you need to prove yourself during that process and that’s where practical experience plays a major role. twitter.com/batajoonp/status/1359903399278354440
Time to wrap it up! I think this is my biggest thread 🧵 of all time!
Thanks for all the great questions that you posted! Hopefully you enjoyed reading my take on it 😄
If you’re as enthusiastic about Cloud like me and want to know more about it, consider following me!