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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="SirShaun" data-source="post: 16118445" data-attributes="member: 163618"><p>I've seen some games in browsing steam, where you have to code to progress. Could be a fun interactive way to start.</p><p></p><p>In conjunction, you should really learn Linux, lose the GUI, and learn how to use a shell. No GUI, less cost on resources. Most any dev environment is running on a shell. Redhat, CentOS being the open source free variant, is known for being "stable", and OS of choice for most production environments, as patch releases seem to be a bit more vetted.</p><p></p><p>You'll find some companies utilizing Debian based operating systems though, in which case most popular is Ubuntu.</p><p></p><p>If you want to dabble in IaC (Infrastructure as Code). Automation and Dev Ops essentially. You'll find a lot of foreign dev teams, as developers get outsourced quite alot, but you don't really want your infrastructure managed by a foreign team if you get my drift.</p><p></p><p>Traditional (Linux/Windows server management)</p><p>Ansible you'll see a lot of YAML, JSON, Jinja and shell scripts.</p><p>Teraform uses Terraform format and JSON.</p><p></p><p>Container Orchestrators</p><p>Kubernetes uses YAML, and JSON. (Super thin, scaleable, portable application deployment/management)</p><p>Docker alot of YAML. (Used to deploy applications to traditional severs, also will deploy to a kubernetes k8, if I am not mistaken)</p><p></p><p>Dev Ops is pretty sweet. For example, I ripped out Oracle JDK, and replaced with OpenJDK on 30+ CentOS nodes on Friday. Quick migration play, 1 ansible command to kick it off, sat back and watched the show, completed in minutes. Powerful stuff.</p><p></p><p>Side note, if anyone is utilizing Oracle Java SE 8, they quietly announced some subscription bull shit. Get to OpenJDK or upgrade to 9+.</p><p><a href="https://java.com/en/download/release_notice.jsp" target="_blank">Java Future Release Notices</a></p><p><strong>Public updates for Oracle Java SE 8 released after January 2019 will not be available for business, commercial or production use without a commercial license.</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p>[USER=6214]@treynor[/USER] is the godfather of Dev Ops. If he drops in, listen to him lol.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="SirShaun, post: 16118445, member: 163618"] I've seen some games in browsing steam, where you have to code to progress. Could be a fun interactive way to start. In conjunction, you should really learn Linux, lose the GUI, and learn how to use a shell. No GUI, less cost on resources. Most any dev environment is running on a shell. Redhat, CentOS being the open source free variant, is known for being "stable", and OS of choice for most production environments, as patch releases seem to be a bit more vetted. You'll find some companies utilizing Debian based operating systems though, in which case most popular is Ubuntu. If you want to dabble in IaC (Infrastructure as Code). Automation and Dev Ops essentially. You'll find a lot of foreign dev teams, as developers get outsourced quite alot, but you don't really want your infrastructure managed by a foreign team if you get my drift. Traditional (Linux/Windows server management) Ansible you'll see a lot of YAML, JSON, Jinja and shell scripts. Teraform uses Terraform format and JSON. Container Orchestrators Kubernetes uses YAML, and JSON. (Super thin, scaleable, portable application deployment/management) Docker alot of YAML. (Used to deploy applications to traditional severs, also will deploy to a kubernetes k8, if I am not mistaken) Dev Ops is pretty sweet. For example, I ripped out Oracle JDK, and replaced with OpenJDK on 30+ CentOS nodes on Friday. Quick migration play, 1 ansible command to kick it off, sat back and watched the show, completed in minutes. Powerful stuff. Side note, if anyone is utilizing Oracle Java SE 8, they quietly announced some subscription bull shit. Get to OpenJDK or upgrade to 9+. [URL='https://java.com/en/download/release_notice.jsp']Java Future Release Notices[/URL] [b]Public updates for Oracle Java SE 8 released after January 2019 will not be available for business, commercial or production use without a commercial license. [/b] [USER=6214]@treynor[/USER] is the godfather of Dev Ops. If he drops in, listen to him lol. [/QUOTE]
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