Training alone is worth its weight in gold. You wouldn't scale a mountain without training, why do folks think this is rational in clustering.
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Replying to @timothysc
I usually see training purchased after a PoC has been done and a decision has been made. Do people do it for initial research? How do you convince management to pay for it when it may not be applicable?
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Replying to @KarlKFI
If you have purchased training after PoC... you're doing it wrong. WRT how, that's tradecraft
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Replying to @timothysc
Are there any 3rd parties offering “overview training” of competing solutions? The vendor trainings are necessarily biased, ofc. So you’d have to take multiple to judge fairly.
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Replying to @KarlKFI
I get your argument, but I haven't really seen fundamental training inherently biased, b/c they go through concepts vs. differentiations.
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Replying to @timothysc
Well, for example, RedHat trains on OpenShift, and Mesosphere trains on K8s-on-DC/OS, and Google trains on GKE. All of them could sell you on K8s in general, but none of them are gonna give you a fair and balanced overview/training of KaaS solutions.
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Replying to @KarlKFI
My point still holds regarding "fundamentals training".
@heptio, and@CloudNativeFdn link'd courses, have "fundamentals training" that doesn't cover provider-specific content at all. It's completely agnostic on purpose.1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @timothysc @KarlKFI and
I think nearly all vendors could agree on most of core training and prevent so much redundant effort and confusion for students. All we need to do is build core training together using open source methods.
@linuxfoundation doesnt do that and I cant fathom why1 reply 1 retweet 1 like -
Replying to @afewell @timothysc and
I agree with your frustrations but we have to be vendor neutral, we have CKA/CKAD certifications that are solid and are producing more intro courses/training for other
@CloudNativeFdn projects4 replies 0 retweets 2 likes -
Replying to @cra @timothysc and
An open source edu model would allow vendors to agree on a common core and then not have to invest resources to reinvent the wheel ($savings) and create a confusing & redundant educational environment for learners
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And an open source common core would allow vendors to focus their training on only the unique aspects of their platform, which would solve the key problem this thread was about and greatly benefit worker mobility
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