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Learner Reviews & Feedback for Introduction to Containers w/ Docker, Kubernetes & OpenShift by IBM

4.4
stars
735 ratings

About the Course

Take the next step in your software engineering career by getting skilled in container tools and technologies! The average salary for jobs that require container skills is $137,000 in the US according to salary.com, making Devops professionals and developers with these skills highly in demand. More than 70 percent of Fortune 100 companies are running containerized applications. But why? Using containerization, organizations can move applications quickly and seamlessly among desktop, on-premises, and cloud platforms. In this beginner course on containers, learn how to build cloud native applications using current containerization tools and technologies such as Docker, container registries, Kubernetes, Red Hat, OpenShift, and Istio. Also learn how to deploy and scale your applications in any public, private, or hybrid cloud. By taking this course you will familiarize yourself with: - Docker objects, Dockerfile commands, container image naming, Docker networking, storage, and plugins - Kubernetes command line interface (CLI), or “kubectl” to manipulate objects, manage workloads in a Kubernetes cluster, and apply basic kubectl commands - ReplicaSets, autoscaling, rolling updates, ConfigMaps, Secrets, and service bindings - The similarities and differences between OpenShift and Kubernetes Each week, you will apply what you learn in hands-on, browser-based labs. By the end of the course, you’ll be able to build a container image, then deploy and scale your container on the cloud using OpenShift. The skills taught in this course are essential to anyone in the fields of software development, back-end & full-stack development, cloud architects, cloud system engineers, devops practitioners, site reliability engineers (SRE), cloud networking specialists and many other roles....

Top reviews

HI

Apr 1, 2024

I nice course could use a bit more details in the lab parts to further explain the containerization and a bit more details on OpenShift is required . Overall a really interesting course yet again.

NJ

Oct 26, 2022

A good introduction to Docker, Kubernetes and OpenShift. I really enjoyed the hand-on labs. They're an efficient way to understand how abstract concepts can be applied.

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201 - 211 of 211 Reviews for Introduction to Containers w/ Docker, Kubernetes & OpenShift

By Joakim G

Apr 20, 2022

Some problems in final exam, and instructions was not as clear as one gotten used to.

By Luca M

May 28, 2021

Too many problems with the Labs, but if fixed the course is smooth and nice

By Sherrissa W H

Feb 18, 2024

It was a bit confusing to understand and the lab environment was too slow.

By Dharay M

Jan 29, 2024

lots of jargon, content explanation needs improvement

By Frank R

May 19, 2021

Too much guided assignments

By NGUYEN P T D

Oct 17, 2023

Week 1 and Week 2 too long

By Sean M

Mar 28, 2024

Was a lot of rote-stating definition with little context as to what these different functionalities are used for with examples. Instead they only provide context for what they do within Docker and Kubernetes. This is quite confusing as this course is supposedly aimed at people with no experience of either application. Also the final project is a joke and is pretty much a step by step follow along guide with little room for actual learning or attempting to make the student think at all. Half the steps are incomplete in their description causing you to "click to view hint" to see what they are even asking, which just spits out the example code that you can just copy and paste to get the right answer. For example, "autoscale the deployment" and the only way to find out how much the assignment creator wants you to autoscale the deployment by is to view the hint. How that is supposed to test anything, I don't know.

By Tim R

Aug 5, 2022

Basically well explained, but the course can not be completed, because div. problems arose. Authorization failed. Routing of the application not accessible. I have now spent 4h + to search forums and still it remains unsuccessful.

By Chung, W

Aug 20, 2023

It is always hard to understand the concepts via very vague slides. Not until later in the code labs can I start to understand few concepts, yet only a FEW.

By Skye F

Aug 15, 2022

Final project connections were extremely unreliable and it was a struggle to wait for everything to work to finish the source.

By Motasim A

Aug 27, 2022

LAb at week 4 don't workk, Openshift tab doesn't show up and the problem hasn't been addressed