Container on Microsoft AZURE Docker Kubernetes- Azure Devops
$19.99 $15.99Track price
A lot of people working in the Information Technology sector are expected to be familiar with a few technologies that are required in the projects you are supposed to work. No matter whether you have a background in software development, operations or testing, DevOps has changed the way people used to work. With constant disruptions from the Cloud Computing services, organizations are moving all of their projects directly on the cloud. It doesn’t matter whether its hosted on the public, private or hybrid cloud infrastructure, you are still expected to work on two key technologies– Containers and Virtual Machines. In this course you will be learning about Container services on Microsoft Azure cloud platform. You will be learning Containers right from the beginning, so don’t worry if you are just moving to Containers. Later in this course, you will learn with some hands–on practical examples and demonstrations on some of the container services on Microsoft Azure.
What is Docker?
It is a set of platform as a service products that use OS–level virtualization to deliver software in packages called containers. Containers are isolated from one another and bundle their own software, libraries and configuration files; they can communicate with each other through well–defined channels.
Specification: Container on Microsoft AZURE Docker Kubernetes- Azure Devops
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14 reviews for Container on Microsoft AZURE Docker Kubernetes- Azure Devops
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Price | $15.99 |
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Provider | |
Duration | 3 hours |
Year | 2021 |
Level | All |
Language | English ... |
Certificate | Yes |
Quizzes | Yes |
$19.99 $15.99
Selver Basic –
It is just reading from slides. No real learning experience. The tutorial on creating the kubernetes services on azure lacks structure. The manifest file is not described and that files purpose and place in the kubernetes universe is not mentioned. For the resource creation, it is just said: this is this, this is that and so on. No context and explanation is given on why. Also it is mentioned that somethings are present when they are clearly not (like the public ip on the overview in part 4). And that I found most disturbing is that when the renaming of azure vote.yml to azure vote.yaml needed to be done, he actually removed the file with ‘rm’, then touched and then opened an editor and pasted the yaml content in it and then saved it. Instead of doing ‘mv azure vote.yml azure vote.yaml’.
Indraj R –
Very basic steps
Shaun Boland –
this is very basic stuff
Gary Black –
It’s nice that you’ve covered the starter content here. It would be better if you prepped ahead of time and edited the videos to prevent long pauses + viewers don’t want to see your mistakes. It just burns time. Anyway, it did the job. Thanks…
Goli Aapte –
nice tutorial
Mrityunjay Pandey –
I learned a lot on docker containers and kubernetes and how to deploy them on the cloud.
Diego Cozzolino Calado –
Show de maaais..
Manpreet Chaddha –
A new and interesting topic for software engineers.
Sreedhar Singaraju –
very bad
Ajay Purushothaman –
Content is at very high level. Does not give detailed information.
Amit –
Left in the middle. Presenter is not very prepared. I was expecting a proper demo of deploying an application from scratch and with all different settings. Somewhere I am lost.
Shubham Malik –
Suitable for beginners and people new to containers, but can be more detailed for experts.
Gabriel D’Souza –
Professionals would understand better about containers on azure, but for absolute beginner like me, fundamentals could be more elaborate.
Brian Steven Martin –
Prefer more explanations regarding fundamentals. Felt like course went from intro to registry demo and missed content. But a good overview of AKS.