I'm a certified AWS Solutions Architect and I speak a lot at AWS meetups and conferences. Daily rate offers are pretty good. It's a good investment - not cheap but worthwhile.
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Cloud AZURE and AWS contract roles
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Just out of interest, how long have you been a SA and what's your background? Is the SA the only AWS qualification that you hold?Originally posted by RasputinDude View PostI'm a certified AWS Solutions Architect and I speak a lot at AWS meetups and conferences. Daily rate offers are pretty good. It's a good investment - not cheap but worthwhile.Comment
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Originally, I'm from machine control software engineering but got bored of that a few years ago and took an opportunity as a perm to re-skill on a decent salary. I didn't just go straight for the SA qualification but built up to it over time. The course material is here (https://aws.amazon.com/certification...-professional/). Meetup groups are also a good way to meet others and learn.Originally posted by spongeym View PostJust out of interest, how long have you been a SA and what's your background? Is the SA the only AWS qualification that you hold?
The big thing about AWS is that if you are going to use it, then USE it. All of it. If you stick to EC2 VMs running everything then it's going to be super expensive. Use the services - for example, SQS instead of running RabbitMQ on EC2 instances, RDS instead of MySql on EC2 etc).
If you want more information, PM me.
(Edit) didn't answer the "how long" question: About three years or soComment
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or, use an orchestrator on top of boggo EC2 instances to maximise value and avoid being completely locked in to the AWS platform and pricingOriginally posted by RasputinDude View PostThe big thing about AWS is that if you are going to use it, then USE it. All of it. If you stick to EC2 VMs running everything then it's going to be super expensive. Use the services - for example, SQS instead of running RabbitMQ on EC2 instances, RDS instead of MySql on EC2 etc).Comment
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At my gig we use azure and blob alot. Linking them all was a a disaster until SSIS for azure/blob came along.Comment
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Well, there are very different use cases and it is most certainly a case of "one size fits none". I've heard the lock-in argument so many times but I don't have much time for it really. If you have made a business decision to adopt a technology then make the best use of it. If you do a half-arsed solution then it's going to suck. You don't architect around not having vendor lock-in for Oracle for example; you make a decision to use Oracle and then have to optimise around i.Originally posted by SeanT View Postor, use an orchestrator on top of boggo EC2 instances to maximise value and avoid being completely locked in to the AWS platform and pricingComment
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So you have actively worked as a AWS solutions architect for 3 years? Do you highly require these coding stuff during your day to day work? lke them json puppet, chef etc . (Are they killer to learn? - as i am coming from Vmwware enviroment .. what do you think?)Originally posted by RasputinDude View PostI'm a certified AWS Solutions Architect and I speak a lot at AWS meetups and conferences. Daily rate offers are pretty good. It's a good investment - not cheap but worthwhile.Comment
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Originally posted by rurffy View PostSo you have actively worked as a AWS solutions architect for 3 years? Do you highly require these coding stuff during your day to day work? lke them json puppet, chef etc . (Are they killer to learn? - as i am coming from Vmwware enviroment .. what do you think?)
You misunderstand - I have been certified for three years. Coding - I don't do much of that any more, I'm actually a permie pointy haired boss right now - although I still maintain one commercial system. I can't say that I have ever heard json being described as "coding" but chef yes I use a lot along with ansible.Comment
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