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KubeCraft (Free)

11.2k members • Free

KubeCraft Career Accelerator

830 members • $4,800/year

4 contributions to KubeCraft (Free)
Share what you've been working on 🐧
Hello friends! What have you been working on this week? Learning for a cert? Building a project? Or enjoying holiday? Share it below! :) I've been working on YouTube videos and hope to finish two of them next week.
Share what you've been working on 🐧
3 likes • Aug '25
I created a deployment using k3s, tailscale and terraform on hetzner. It's very nice to get some more hands on experience. If you open up the project in the hetzner console you can see your nodes pop up, in the tailscale admin interface you can see your nodes connect to your tailnet and on the command line you see the terraform output showing when the nodes have connected to your tailnet. I also used Claude to speed up the process and to overcome obstacles when stuck. Working step by step you have the time to open up and read the code created by Claude. This was definitely a great learning experience.
Why Time Became My Most Valuable Asset
I always chose the Free path, for everything, even when it cost me much more time till I was about 25. Pirated games, scanned hours scanning for cracked software or coupons ... Two realizations caused a instant, dramatic shift for me (eventually turning me into who I am today). - First, I began to truly value my time, realizing I can only spend it once. I saw that learning from others is often the smarter move. - Second, I realized I was competing with people who invest in themselves, and there’s no way I could outpace that by going solo. But when I got into DevOps, I hit a wall. There was too much content, too many conflicting paths, and no clear way forward that made sense for me at that stage. And thats putting it mildly. I know I won't ever get the years back I spent learning on my own, but that grind gave me so much information that I was able to condense it into what matters for people who want to learn from me. And I'm happy to say that today, the results speak everyday. David, a long KubeCraft member said "The subscription fee is tiny compared to the value this community has delivered to me so far.” I am curious, what moment made you realize the value of investing in yourself?
Why Time Became My Most Valuable Asset
5 likes • May '25
"But when I got into DevOps, I hit a wall. There was too much content, too many conflicting paths, and no clear way forward that made sense for me at that stage." I was dealing with the same challenges, it started a little bit sooner for me. When youtube, stackoverflow and overall googling started to become more and more shallow on youtube and I was looking for learning content that was more hands on and went deeper. That's when I tested using a paid search engine, asking AI for advice and subscribing to Kubecraft. Now there are more resources to learn than my days have hours, but it's better this way than the other way round.
Build dev environment from bash script on git...
Does anyone work like this? Especially for the exam I thought about how to improve speed and basic error finding techniques by creating a vim setup to "carry around" when logging into any pod, container, VM or anything. For example this config settings: set et # expandtab (use space character when tab key used) set ts=2 # tabstop set sts=2 # softtabstop (remove 2 spaces when deleting indentations set sw=2 # shiftwidth set ic # ignorecase when searching in vim set ai # autoindent set si # smart indent set hls # highlightsearch (highlights searched words) set bg=dark # assume dark color for the background (better color scheme) set nu # show line numberssyntax on # syntax highlighting Next would be a better prompt to know where you are instantly: like context IP address A linter for basic syntax error handling https://docs.kubelinter.io/#/
Poll
6 members have voted
2 likes • May '24
CKA as a start 🙂
Introduction
Hi @all, I am working on my Kubernetes experience which I find a bit harder than usual linux topics that I came across over 20 years of linux usage, because of the amount of parts to think about. Although I have set up a cluster on hetzner using claudie and terraform there seem to be 15 nobs I have to turn simultaneously. Using Killercoda has helped me over the initial hurdles getting familiar with the ecosystem and knowing where everything can be found. I hope to speed up the learning from here on.
3 likes • May '24
True, I experienced that when working on Killercoda instead of looking at graphics like this one
1-4 of 4
Alexander Benisch
3
41points to level up
@alexander-benisch-7196
Linux, Python, DevOps https://23.social/@alexbenisch https://github.com/alexbenisch https://gitlab.com/alexbenisch

Active 59m ago
Joined May 9, 2024
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