On 2019/01/23 04:01, wrote:
Hi,
Perhaps, this sounds somewhat Off-Topic. 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?
To me containers and cloud solutions, such as load balancers and rds,
are the next layer of abstraction. Linux will always be there but most
people will work at the higher level of abstraction. Its the way
software evolves. There will be less need for Linux people just as
there was less need for assembly programmers with C and less need to
understand memory management, hardware specific etc with the
introduction of operating system abstractions. It will become a
specialized skill.
Why should people to learn to master the shell, handle process, manage
partitions and tweak config and shell script files?
What do you think?
Has techno-devops-millenials marked the end of history and the Linux
relevance?
I will appreciate your opinions a lot.
TIA
--
--
Sergio Belkin
LPIC-2 Certified - http://www.lpi.org
_______________________________________________
lpi-examdev mailing list
[email protected]
https://list.lpi.org/mailman/listinfo/lpi-examdev
--
🕽 +2711-781 8014
🌐 www.JumpingBean.co.za
_______________________________________________
lpi-examdev mailing list
[email protected]
https://list.lpi.org/mailman/listinfo/lpi-examdev