Hi Sergio and All..

I know that times change and technologies and platforms adapt to changes in a 
surprising way, even so I firmly believe that it does not imply the end of a 
technology like Linux hardway, on the contrary it complements it and helps to 
explore more Linux. As for the "techmilenial" it is a fad and this does not 
imply the end of anything in my opinion.
Today is trendy Kubernets, Docker, openshif, etc and still should not mark the 
end of anything but a step of improvement we do not seek perfection but 
progress. I look forward to adding the "millennials" to improve Linux and not 
the other way around.
In my experience, knowing OpenStack was a challenge and over time I appreciate 
it very much as I learned to explore many improvements to the Linux hardway.
I firmly believe that all these named platforms will help improve Linux as a 
platform in every way.

very good question Sergio.
P.D: Hardway => Linux advance, Shell, coding, developer, Kernel know, Debuging, 
Script Shell power, Load balancer.... etc.

Only that.

70cf8599911e75406c18d7f9

‐‐‐‐‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐‐‐‐‐
On Tuesday, 22 de January de 2019 19:59, Sergio Belkin <[email protected]> wrote:

> Hi,
> Perhaps, this sounds somewhat Off-Topic and provocative. It happens that I'm 
> preparing a webinar around Linux  and LPIC and we are living in a time of 
> "kubernetes, cloud, IaaS, docker, devops, and a bunch of techie-millenial 
> terms". So one somewhat ends to questioning itself, how is Linux still 
> relevant?
>
> Why should people to learn to master the shell, handle process, manage 
> partitions and tweak config and shell script files?
>
> What do you think? What would tou say?
>
> Has techno-devops-millenials marked the end of history and the Linux 
> relevance?
>
> I will appreciate your opinions a lot.
>
> TIA
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