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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
I wanna learn to code - where to start
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<blockquote data-quote="Sonic 03 Cobra" data-source="post: 16118447" data-attributes="member: 3825"><p>Yes learn shell and scripting. For the OP, who is just getting started, he probably just wants to focus on bare bones basics. If you are starting at ground zero, pick up one of the many online intro to coding courses. If you jump right into a 4G (abstracted - java, C#) or 5G (interpreted and abstracted- python, etc) language you will get moving faster but will have no idea why things work the way they work. That’s fine if you just want to play.</p><p></p><p>“DevOps” is interesting because it’s both CI/CD but also fostering a set of behaviors that require the devs to take more ownership and accountability and largely break down the ITIL walls that prevented us from moving fast by collapsing job functions, high degrees of automation and eliminating gatekeeping in the traditional arms-length fashion. Over the last decade through implementation of Agile (first scrum then kanban and SaFE) then CI/CD then DevOps, my teams have gone from quarterly to monthly to biweekly to weekly to daily to just in time release cycles. DevOps is the enabler to get below two weeks. </p><p></p><p>Serverless is where it’s at, Linux vs windows is religious. I run a large engineering organization with five nines uptime off of a combination of windows and multiple flavors of Linux and both on-prem and hosted cloud and SaaS technologies (AWS, SFDC, etc). Lowest TCO is not Linux for legacy, OS-based infrastructure due to high maintenance costs in terms of labor. Cloud foundry and cloud are just containers so the OS becomes largely a non issue and we come more platform agnostic (yay). Bottom line pick the best tool for the problem you are solving. There’s a reason most professional devs largely use Macs (my teams are 65/35 macs/PCs), best of all worlds from a dev perspective. Unless you get into .net then you are largely back into windows territory. With AWS it goes ten steps further and the container concept becomes obsolete.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Sonic 03 Cobra, post: 16118447, member: 3825"] Yes learn shell and scripting. For the OP, who is just getting started, he probably just wants to focus on bare bones basics. If you are starting at ground zero, pick up one of the many online intro to coding courses. If you jump right into a 4G (abstracted - java, C#) or 5G (interpreted and abstracted- python, etc) language you will get moving faster but will have no idea why things work the way they work. That’s fine if you just want to play. “DevOps” is interesting because it’s both CI/CD but also fostering a set of behaviors that require the devs to take more ownership and accountability and largely break down the ITIL walls that prevented us from moving fast by collapsing job functions, high degrees of automation and eliminating gatekeeping in the traditional arms-length fashion. Over the last decade through implementation of Agile (first scrum then kanban and SaFE) then CI/CD then DevOps, my teams have gone from quarterly to monthly to biweekly to weekly to daily to just in time release cycles. DevOps is the enabler to get below two weeks. Serverless is where it’s at, Linux vs windows is religious. I run a large engineering organization with five nines uptime off of a combination of windows and multiple flavors of Linux and both on-prem and hosted cloud and SaaS technologies (AWS, SFDC, etc). Lowest TCO is not Linux for legacy, OS-based infrastructure due to high maintenance costs in terms of labor. Cloud foundry and cloud are just containers so the OS becomes largely a non issue and we come more platform agnostic (yay). Bottom line pick the best tool for the problem you are solving. There’s a reason most professional devs largely use Macs (my teams are 65/35 macs/PCs), best of all worlds from a dev perspective. Unless you get into .net then you are largely back into windows territory. With AWS it goes ten steps further and the container concept becomes obsolete. [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
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I wanna learn to code - where to start
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