@@shubhankarpaygude We are speaking here about AWS, Azure and GCP platforms, not coding. If you learn "the cloud" it won't make a difference if it's AWS or Azure because you will know to work with all of them. Is like learning to drive a car, do you learn to drive a toyota or a subaru? you learn how to drive - the car These are different from coding. Do your own research
Another good video there Lucy. I have certs in AWS and azure, and I recently sat for the Google digital cloud leader exam. Didn’t do so well, mainly because it’s more data science and ML focused
There is a clear shift from AWS to Azure Cloud in many service based IT companies. Not sure if there is any reason / pattern behind this trend. Heard certain services in Azure fair better compared to its counter parts.
Nope. It’s not about the services. Most of vendors shifting are retailers and they don’t want to pay Amazon while it’s also a huge retailer and their competitor. Additionally most of big companies already have Microsoft software and subscriptions installed and integrated (windows, ad, sql server, office 365) and Microsoft can offer some free quotas within those contracts signed off to make customer try their Azure Cloud.
Could you make a video talking about other services that companies use in conjunction with their cloud solutions? Such as terraform and Kubernetes. I always see those two programs the most in job descriptions when searching the various available cloud job openings.
@@iamzlatan823 they launched power bi .captured 40% market. They launched teams they captured entire market They have launched microsoft fabric now end to end analytics with one lake amd single security and copilot. So you can see what's coming in next 2 yrs😉
Hi Lucy, I found your video quite helpful. Personally, I'm trying to figure out which one platform would be better not only to learn (at least a little bit about) but mainly which one should I pick for my own software startup. So far, for everything I've researched, I think Google Cloud could be the best option for me. But I'm not fully sure. I'm building a startup with an AI-driven product/digital service (related to the e-learning industry). I'm in the early stages of it all... getting to terms with what exactly we're trying to accomplish, ideating some type of plan about how we could accomplish it, building a team to work on executing such a plan, selecting the overall infrastructure and tech stack to build things with, and so forth (apart from incorporating a company and all of those legalities). Here, infrastructure-wise, I am quite torn apart between Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud because I find both of these cloud service providers are leading the way when it comes to AI-related cloud services (I'm not talking about underlying infrastructure necessarily, but actual services provided... especially "serverless" ones, which are a lot easier to set up and manage, at least talking from my not-so-very-extensive noob-like experience with the cloud). Azure has Azure AI Studio, for example, which I find very handy and promising, and Google Cloud has Vertex AI Studio, which I also find very promising. Azure seems to be a lot friendlier with OpenAI's models especially, and Google with, well... Google's own Gemini/Gemma set of models. But one can set up and/or use other models, too (at least I know this to be factual with Azure AI, although I think Vertex can do somewhat similar). And a lot of those models are offered as serverless APIs (in the case of Azure, for instance, the serverless APIs I'm the most interested in include the array of OpenAI's GPT and Meta's Llama models). Another of my concerns, apart from ease of use for developers/engineers (including how quickly one can achieve something with them), is actual performance. I find, for example (I live in Argentina), that products that have Azure as their backend cloud provider work a lot faster here than those backed up by Google Cloud. I think the reason for this is that Microsoft actually has servers very close to this part of the world, while Google doesn't have them as close. And so the latency is not the same (Google is a bit slower here). That's my gut feeling why the speed feels different. Digital products (I'm using this as an unbrella term for anything running on the cloud as a backend, like web pages and especially apps... things like Netflix) that use AWS also are quite speedy where I live. So for example, Netflix is a lot faster than Spotify in my region, to put an example. Although both are "usable" (and since I can't live without music and I can go on for months, even years without watching a single movie or tv show or anything of that sort, I actually use Spotify a WHOLE lot more than Netflix... to the point that I am not paying for Netflix anymore, because I simply do not use it, and I am indeed paying for Spotify, because I use it daily, hourly, even). In the end both clouds seem to run "sufficiently well," though. I mean, I use UA-cam every single day (I'm using it right now!), and it feels fast enough. The same with Spotify and such. But indeed, things like Adobe Creative Cloud (I'm really liking Firefly lately, for example), feel a bit speedier. The same comparing Google Search with Microsoft Bing: the different is not a deal-breaker (I use Google almost exclusively and to hell with Bing), but Bing feels speedier. Not by a whole lot, but it is noticeably faster. Another, and an important, of my concerns is price and ease of use, especially as an entrepreneur without much money to invest who has to watch out for expenditures and cut off as many of them as I can (both on infrastructure and people). I find Google Cloud to be one of the cheapest cloud providers out there. Not only do they seem to be one of the most reasonably priced (and with a very clear pricing model), but also they feel (and maybe this is the case because I'm quite used to, well, "using" Google products), like the one cloud I am the most comfortable with (UX/UI-wise). I find their interface really friendly. Second comes Azure in this realm (in my own subjective experience). And oh goddamn holy Molly AWS looks like a goddamn ugly mess coming from the 90s! It doesn't look all that friendly at all in my eyes. Anyway... this is just me thinking out loud (or thinking with my fingers, through the keyboard, down into this comment input field). Bottom line: thank you for your video. It made me think a little bit. Wish you the best with your "UA-camr" endeavors.. have a happy and productive rest of your day/night... goodbye.
Issue is this. I’m about to test and pass my aws cloud test but when you look anywhere here in Miami they want solutions architect and anything you do find for cloud wants year of experience along with degrees amongst other requirements. There has to be something Im possibly missing.
It's the way all tech jobs are. Even entry level askes for like 2 yrs experience. U can still get hired but it means priority would be given to people with mote experience or qualifications. Would suggest going for startups or small businesses and build ur experience and then go to Google or so unless ur lucky the 1st time
so sir should I start my cloud journey with MS Azure 900 certification or AWS cloud practitioner foundational certification? I'm currently a comp undergraduate in Pune, India...
There are fewer jobs, but that doesn't mean that AWS jobs aren't available at all for freshers. However, it is certain that you will have to work hard to find a job. But you can get a fresher AWS Job. My brother got it.
@@adityapasarkar2139I'm also from Pune brother. Currently AWS has the most demand in Pune or any metro city. The thing is there are very few direct AWS jobs available. If you can't find a job solely on basis of AWS, then you might need to learn DevOps. DevOps is in very high demand and fundamentally requires Cloud Platforms to work on.
Great content! I subscribed watching your AWS Cert Path video. 1. What do you consider would be the best combination of two platforms to be more competitive on the job market?
hey Lucy, thanks for this information :) what background do you recommend to start a path in the cloud? I only have experience in marketing, but I'm looking to expand my job possibilities in the IT industry... is it mandatory to have a technical background (as in, do you need to be a developer)? or can you start from scratch even if you don't have that background?
Hi, is the course and practice exam from tutorials dojo (study and practice for a month) is enough to passed the AWS CCP certifications? i'm struggling to jungle of resources. hope to get answers from you. thanks
Hi Lucy, thanks for the video ! 😊 I just wanted to ask you how could I see which cloud platform is the highest in demand in my local area ? Whenever I try to find AWS of GCP related jobs (in LinkedIn for example), I find job opportunities at these companies, which could not be the best option sometimes 😅 Thanks in advance!
Hey Lucy! Thank you for this great and informative video! I think its important to know a little about every cloud but concentrate on one as well! I'm learning that having multi-cloud skills is essential as well so thank you for this video. I appreciate all that you do for us Lucy! Please keep teaching us and thank you for your AWS serverless course on LinkedIn too! As usual, be well, be safe and Cheers!!!
Assalamu Alaikum WRWB sister Lucy. Can you please help me in deciding steps to learn AWS. I'm a very new learner. I haven't started yet as I don't know programming and I request you to provide me with institution or online course where I can learn understand and find a job which pays good figure for aws. Also I want to get certificate as well for aws
Wow, someone who actually pays attention to their comments. I will definitely bb e paying much more attention and interacting more with your channel. Thank you so much for the valuable content you produce, it is very much appreciated❤
Learn - the cloud - and you will know all the platforms and providers
How do I learn the cloud,?lol😅
Wtf bro its like saying learn coding and you will know all the languages
@@shubhankarpaygude We are speaking here about AWS, Azure and GCP platforms, not coding. If you learn "the cloud" it won't make a difference if it's AWS or Azure because you will know to work with all of them.
Is like learning to drive a car, do you learn to drive a toyota or a subaru? you learn how to drive - the car
These are different from coding. Do your own research
@@shubhankarpaygude good one :D
learn to learn and you will know everything
Good morning Tech Cloud Avenger. Glad you are back.
Another good video there Lucy. I have certs in AWS and azure, and I recently sat for the Google digital cloud leader exam. Didn’t do so well, mainly because it’s more data science and ML focused
Hi,So which certification helps for AI ML focussed career .Thanks in advance.
I really like how neatly you share information in your videos Lucy. Great video again!
And I have a bias for AWS too as you do hehe :)
There is a clear shift from AWS to Azure Cloud in many service based IT companies. Not sure if there is any reason / pattern behind this trend. Heard certain services in Azure fair better compared to its counter parts.
Nope. It’s not about the services. Most of vendors shifting are retailers and they don’t want to pay Amazon while it’s also a huge retailer and their competitor.
Additionally most of big companies already have Microsoft software and subscriptions installed and integrated (windows, ad, sql server, office 365) and Microsoft can offer some free quotas within those contracts signed off to make customer try their Azure Cloud.
@@oleksii.lopasov That makes sense.
Could you make a video talking about other services that companies use in conjunction with their cloud solutions? Such as terraform and Kubernetes. I always see those two programs the most in job descriptions when searching the various available cloud job openings.
My interest in Android development is swaying me towards GCP since they have Firebase.
I passed AWS cloud practitioner just a few days ago
Hi sir, can you guide me for the same, please??
ok?
Azure is the future. Microsoft Fabric💯
how do you say can you explain
@@iamzlatan823 they launched power bi .captured 40% market.
They launched teams they captured entire market
They have launched microsoft fabric now end to end analytics with one lake amd single security and copilot. So you can see what's coming in next 2 yrs😉
From market cap 😁😂
AWS employee here, very good channel, props to you!
Hey bro can you please guide me how to start on AWS journey. I have zero knowledge in programming and I'm a average student.
@@mliaquatali7607forget it
Hi Lucy, I found your video quite helpful.
Personally, I'm trying to figure out which one platform would be better not only to learn (at least a little bit about) but mainly which one should I pick for my own software startup. So far, for everything I've researched, I think Google Cloud could be the best option for me. But I'm not fully sure.
I'm building a startup with an AI-driven product/digital service (related to the e-learning industry). I'm in the early stages of it all... getting to terms with what exactly we're trying to accomplish, ideating some type of plan about how we could accomplish it, building a team to work on executing such a plan, selecting the overall infrastructure and tech stack to build things with, and so forth (apart from incorporating a company and all of those legalities).
Here, infrastructure-wise, I am quite torn apart between Microsoft Azure and Google Cloud because I find both of these cloud service providers are leading the way when it comes to AI-related cloud services (I'm not talking about underlying infrastructure necessarily, but actual services provided... especially "serverless" ones, which are a lot easier to set up and manage, at least talking from my not-so-very-extensive noob-like experience with the cloud).
Azure has Azure AI Studio, for example, which I find very handy and promising, and Google Cloud has Vertex AI Studio, which I also find very promising. Azure seems to be a lot friendlier with OpenAI's models especially, and Google with, well... Google's own Gemini/Gemma set of models. But one can set up and/or use other models, too (at least I know this to be factual with Azure AI, although I think Vertex can do somewhat similar). And a lot of those models are offered as serverless APIs (in the case of Azure, for instance, the serverless APIs I'm the most interested in include the array of OpenAI's GPT and Meta's Llama models).
Another of my concerns, apart from ease of use for developers/engineers (including how quickly one can achieve something with them), is actual performance. I find, for example (I live in Argentina), that products that have Azure as their backend cloud provider work a lot faster here than those backed up by Google Cloud. I think the reason for this is that Microsoft actually has servers very close to this part of the world, while Google doesn't have them as close. And so the latency is not the same (Google is a bit slower here). That's my gut feeling why the speed feels different. Digital products (I'm using this as an unbrella term for anything running on the cloud as a backend, like web pages and especially apps... things like Netflix) that use AWS also are quite speedy where I live. So for example, Netflix is a lot faster than Spotify in my region, to put an example. Although both are "usable" (and since I can't live without music and I can go on for months, even years without watching a single movie or tv show or anything of that sort, I actually use Spotify a WHOLE lot more than Netflix... to the point that I am not paying for Netflix anymore, because I simply do not use it, and I am indeed paying for Spotify, because I use it daily, hourly, even).
In the end both clouds seem to run "sufficiently well," though. I mean, I use UA-cam every single day (I'm using it right now!), and it feels fast enough. The same with Spotify and such. But indeed, things like Adobe Creative Cloud (I'm really liking Firefly lately, for example), feel a bit speedier. The same comparing Google Search with Microsoft Bing: the different is not a deal-breaker (I use Google almost exclusively and to hell with Bing), but Bing feels speedier. Not by a whole lot, but it is noticeably faster.
Another, and an important, of my concerns is price and ease of use, especially as an entrepreneur without much money to invest who has to watch out for expenditures and cut off as many of them as I can (both on infrastructure and people). I find Google Cloud to be one of the cheapest cloud providers out there. Not only do they seem to be one of the most reasonably priced (and with a very clear pricing model), but also they feel (and maybe this is the case because I'm quite used to, well, "using" Google products), like the one cloud I am the most comfortable with (UX/UI-wise). I find their interface really friendly. Second comes Azure in this realm (in my own subjective experience). And oh goddamn holy Molly AWS looks like a goddamn ugly mess coming from the 90s! It doesn't look all that friendly at all in my eyes.
Anyway... this is just me thinking out loud (or thinking with my fingers, through the keyboard, down into this comment input field).
Bottom line: thank you for your video. It made me think a little bit.
Wish you the best with your "UA-camr" endeavors.. have a happy and productive rest of your day/night... goodbye.
Thank you for the knowledge. This helped me a lot as a current undergrad
No worries, glad it helped 😊
@@TechwithLucy Do you have a LinkedIn or mentorship?
Can you interview some older tech workers in their 50s?
Issue is this. I’m about to test and pass my aws cloud test but when you look anywhere here in Miami they want solutions architect and anything you do find for cloud wants year of experience along with degrees amongst other requirements. There has to be something Im possibly missing.
It's the way all tech jobs are. Even entry level askes for like 2 yrs experience. U can still get hired but it means priority would be given to people with mote experience or qualifications. Would suggest going for startups or small businesses and build ur experience and then go to Google or so unless ur lucky the 1st time
just apply anyway even if u dont meet all the requirements
My takeaw was AWS and Azure are fair game but I might want to leave GCP alone for now
Thanks
I am currently learning AWS, but there are no openings for freshers as of now in India
so sir should I start my cloud journey with MS Azure 900 certification or AWS cloud practitioner foundational certification? I'm currently a comp undergraduate in Pune, India...
@@adityapasarkar2139 it's upto you, both AWS and azure have good demand in the market. It all depends on the openings.
There are fewer jobs, but that doesn't mean that AWS jobs aren't available at all for freshers. However, it is certain that you will have to work hard to find a job. But you can get a fresher AWS Job. My brother got it.
@@adityapasarkar2139I'm also from Pune brother. Currently AWS has the most demand in Pune or any metro city. The thing is there are very few direct AWS jobs available. If you can't find a job solely on basis of AWS, then you might need to learn DevOps. DevOps is in very high demand and fundamentally requires Cloud Platforms to work on.
Thanku for talk about relevant answer
Hi Lucy,
What are your thoughts on cloud repatriation?
Could you please make a video on it if possible?
Great content! I subscribed watching your AWS Cert Path video.
1. What do you consider would be the best combination of two platforms to be more competitive on the job market?
AWS and Azure together they have over 50% of the cloud market
GCP is not a friendly for users like others and it's a huge cons
hey Lucy, thanks for this information :) what background do you recommend to start a path in the cloud? I only have experience in marketing, but I'm looking to expand my job possibilities in the IT industry... is it mandatory to have a technical background (as in, do you need to be a developer)? or can you start from scratch even if you don't have that background?
hi, i have the same question!
use all of them. specially the one you get the most credits for free
Hi, is the course and practice exam from tutorials dojo (study and practice for a month) is enough to passed the AWS CCP certifications? i'm struggling to jungle of resources. hope to get answers from you. thanks
Google is far behind.
Azure gives me window vibes
AWS is an option left.
Thanks for comparing. It helps me to shape my DevOps journey.
what do you mean by far behind?
@@abhaychandra2624 Least used in market. BTW, I like GCP.
Thank you
Thanks for watching :)
Hi Lucy, thanks for the video ! 😊
I just wanted to ask you how could I see which cloud platform is the highest in demand in my local area ? Whenever I try to find AWS of GCP related jobs (in LinkedIn for example), I find job opportunities at these companies, which could not be the best option sometimes 😅
Thanks in advance!
Ask ChatGPT.
Thank you so much
Which has the best docs
I just read a reddit discussion and AWS was mentioned as having better/best documentation among cloud platforms. Then Azure, then GCP
Amazon has a moat on e-commerce. But AWS doesn't have a moat.
Nice to see you again. Lucy, is there anyway I could speak with to get some career advice?
no bro
Can anyone suggest me names for forum where i can connect or ask queries to aws dev. or anyone who is interested in answering query
Excellent 👌👌👌
Google cloud is not so popular
Hey Lucy! Thank you for this great and informative video! I think its important to know a little about every cloud but concentrate on one as well! I'm learning that having multi-cloud skills is essential as well so thank you for this video. I appreciate all that you do for us Lucy! Please keep teaching us and thank you for your AWS serverless course on LinkedIn too! As usual, be well, be safe and Cheers!!!
Assalamu Alaikum WRWB sister Lucy. Can you please help me in deciding steps to learn AWS. I'm a very new learner. I haven't started yet as I don't know programming and I request you to provide me with institution or online course where I can learn understand and find a job which pays good figure for aws. Also I want to get certificate as well for aws
Great video, really loved it
Wow, someone who actually pays attention to their comments. I will definitely bb e paying much more attention and interacting more with your channel. Thank you so much for the valuable content you produce, it is very much appreciated❤