Are You Certifiable? Why Cloud Technology Certifications Matter

The post Are You Certifiable? Why Cloud Technology Certifications Matter appeared first on Mirantis | Pure Play Open Cloud.
There was a time when tech professionals in certain fields could expect to get multiple emails from recruiters — every single day. In most cases, those days are over, so you want to make sure that you build your resume to best advantage. Last month, we talked to Mariela Gagnon of Cre8Hires and consultant Jens Soldners about one of your greatest advantages: technical certifications. You can view the full webinar here, and we thought we’d bring the Q&A’s here to the blog.
Q: Do employers negatively view certifications for older technologies? Should they not be added to a resume? What are examples of cloud-related certifications that should not be added?
Mariela Gagnon: There’s no such thing as a “bad” certification. Older certifications aren’t likely to prove your qualification for a particular position, but all certifications show that you have the discipline to work to improve yourself, so it’s all favorable. Of course, you don’t want to focus on certifications that aren’t relevant, but you should certainly include them.
Q: At what points in a career are certifications most useful?
Mariela: Certifications are useful at all stages of your career. Early on, when you don’t have much experience, they show that you have the relevant knowledge. When you do have more experience, they show that you have the drive and the self-discipline to constantly improve yourself, and they can help you to get promoted, or even to survive a downsizing.
Q: What is the difference between Mirantis and Red Hat OpenStack certification?
Nick Chase: The major difference is that the Mirantis OpenStack and Kubernetes certifications are completely vendor neutral, whereas the Red Hat certifications are proprietary and focus on their own products. The Mirantis certifications focus on the technologies themselves, so you can use that knowledge in any environment. The Red Hat certifications are specific to their products and may not be as applicable if you’re not in a Red Hat environment.
Q: What is the best way to prepare for Mirantis Kubernetes certification?
Nick: The easiest, surest way is, of course, to take the Mirantis Kubernetes & Docker bootcamp. You can either take the instructor-led or the self-paced version. You can also get a list of the exam requirements at https://training.mirantis.com/kcm100-exam-requirements/ so you can study up on your own.
Q: If I have a large number of certifications, should I list them all or highlight specific ones?
Mariela: You definitely want to highlight the ones that are closer to the task you’re applying for, but it never hurts to have any certifications on your resume. Just make sure that the most recent, the most active, the most relevant ones are closer to the top.
Q: If I am unemployed and use that time to study and earn certifications, can that time be listed as schooling on my employment history?
Mariela: I’ve come across this a lot, especially when the job market wasn’t too great. We’d have candidates who might have a year gap in their resume. So that would be tough, especially when you’re up against candidates who don’t have a gap. So you’re always being asked to explain, “What were you doing for that year?” A lot of candidates, I’ll have them put thier education into that time on their resume so it kind of fills in the void and it also shows that even though I’m not working, I’m still keeping up-to-date on the technologies, so if you get me in this role, I’m up to date and ready to go. So it really adds value and connects to whatever prior experience you have.
Q: Are there essential skills I need to have before starting the cloud certification journey?
Jens Soeldner: Most often, you’re dealing with a Linux environment, so you’ll want to have Linux command line skills, and have a basic understanding of networking. In the case of Microsoft-centric environments, you’d be well served to have a familiarity with PowerShell.
Q: What cloud certification is recommended as a starting point?
Jens: Which cloud certifications to do first are highly dependant on what vendor you’re working with. There’s no common denominator here; some knowledge is transferable, since cloud services are similar.
Q: What types of certifications are not worth getting? Are there any that would give you negative value?
Mariela: There is never a certification that is not worth getting. It is really a personal decision. You want to ensure that you are becoming certified in technologies that you are interested in working with. It will help you target and get hired for the roles you want!
Q: Also please tell us how to go through resume parsers?
Mariela: Resume parsers go off of Keyword searches, or what is known as Booleans, to gather large numbers of resumes that include those keywords. These parsers highlight the keywords in the resume, so make sure that it’s closer to the top and more recent. This process will get more automated as time goes on, as well.
Q: There are so many certifications out there. Is there a specific path of certifications that you would recommend for System Administrators ? It would be good to know must have vs nice to have.
Jens: I teach VMware’s and other classes, and it’s great if the participants have a working understanding of Windows or Linux. Obviously if it’s a Windows-centric position you’re looking at Microsoft certifications such as Microsoft Certified System Administrator for Windows Server 2012 or 2016. In the Linux world, I would recommend to go for any certification out there, proprietary or vendor neutral. Just something that certifies that you know your way around the command line, you can start and stop services, use the vi editor, and so on, just as a baseline. If you want to go a little bit deeper on networking, i would recommend Cisco Certified Network Associate. it’s very widespread and well recognized. If the job involves VMware, then VCP certainly makes sense.
Q: How I could take the Mirantis exam? I’m not in the USA. Can I take it online?
Nick: Yes, we have proctored virtual exams available in either US or EMEA friendly times. Also, the Associate OCM50 written exam can be taken anytime, anywhere.
Q: Are there any Mirantis bootcamps in or around Reading or London in the UK?
Nick: The best thing to do is to check the schedule. We have classes in Europe, and we add new classes on a monthly basis. You can also send a request through http://training.mirantis.com to request a new location.
The post Are You Certifiable? Why Cloud Technology Certifications Matter appeared first on Mirantis | Pure Play Open Cloud.
Quelle: Mirantis

Now You Can Configure Password Policies to Help Meet Your Security Standards with AWS Directory Service for Microsoft Active Directory

Starting today, you can use AWS Directory Service for Microsoft Active Directory (Enterprise Edition), also known as AWS Microsoft AD, to help enforce password policies that meet your security standards. AWS has added five password policies to your AWS Microsoft AD directory, and you can configure and manage these policies to enforce different security requirements for different user groups.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

New Information in the AWS IAM Console Helps You Adhere to IAM Best Practices

Today, we made it easier for you to follow AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) best practices by adding additional information in the Users section of the IAM console. This new information in the IAM user table helps you monitor user activity in your AWS account and identify access keys and passwords that should be rotated regularly. It also enables you to better audit users’ MFA device usage, and gives you better visibility into users’ group memberships. This information is available in all AWS regions today.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com

AWS CloudFormation coverage updates for Amazon API Gateway, Amazon EC2, Amazon EMR, Amazon DynamoDB and more

You can now provision the following AWS resources using CloudFormation.

AWS::ApiGateway::DomainName

Use the AWS::ApiGateway::DomainName resource to specify a custom, friendly URL for your API that’s deployed to Amazon API Gateway.

AWS::EC2::EgressOnlyInternetGateway

Create an egress-only Internet gateway for your VPC with the AWS::EC2::EgressOnlyInternetGateway resource.

AWS::EMR::InstanceFleetConfig

Configure a spot instance fleet for an Amazon EMR cluster using the InstanceFleetConfig resource.

Quelle: aws.amazon.com

Missed Azure OpenDev? Watch the videos on-demand now!

On Wednesday, June 21, Microsoft hosted the first ever Azure OpenDev virtual event, and I was blown away by the community support and response! The event was only made possible with the amazing support of partners such as Canonical, Red Hat, Docker, Pivotal, and Chef. OpenDev brought to life what’s possible with open source in the cloud based on experiences from our partners, customers, and community members from around the world.

Nearly one million people have already watched the event live or on-demand. If you have not participated yet, watch all the Azure OpenDev sessions now, for free and on-demand!

Microsoft’s open source strategy

I kicked off Azure OpenDev by sharing Microsoft’s strategy for open source, bringing to light facts and unknown statistics around our usage of and contribution to open source software. I highlighted some of our most recent open source related announcements such as managed services for MySQL and PostgreSQL on Azure, a new open source Kubernetes tool, Draft, and joining the Cloud Foundry Foundation.

Building on the latter, I was fortunate to have Abby Kearns, Executive Director of the Cloud Foundry Foundation, join me via video-conference during OpenDev to explain the role of the foundation, how they work with cloud vendors, and her perspective on Microsoft joining the foundation.

Learning from thought leaders

Next, some of our partners shared their point of view about open source in the cloud, microservices development, containers, and DevOps using open technologies.

Scott Johnston, COO at Docker, demonstrated how Docker can help modernize traditional applications and bring them to the cloud, in addition to announcing support for Docker Community Edition in Azure Container Service.
Mark Shuttleworth, founder of Ubuntu and Canonical, showcased Canonical Kubernetes and large-scale distributed systems on Azure.
Joshua McKenty of Pivotal and Rick Clark of Mastercard talked about business transformation through the adoption of cloud-native patterns for Java applications on Pivotal Cloud Foundry, powered by Azure.
Nicholas Gerasimatos from Red Hat presented the Red Hat + Microsoft partnership and OpenShift running on Azure.
Nell Shamrell-Harrington from Chef presented application automation with Chef Habitat.

Mark Shuttleworth, Founder of Canonical and Ubuntu, demoing Canonical Kubernetes

Joshua McKenty of Pivotal and Rick Clark of Mastercard discussing cloud native apps

Some Microsoft speakers also presented their experiences with open source technologies.

Gabe Monroy and Michelle Noorali, who recently joined Microsoft through the Deis acquisition, presented Helm and Draft, two open source tools to help manage Kubernetes.
Kaspars Mickevics, engineering manager from the Skype team in Estonia, showed how they’re using Azure to run the massive-scale Debian systems that power the VoIP solution worldwide, as he shared some practical, technically deep learnings.

Try it yourself with the how-to videos

We published how-to videos to help you quickly get started and experience open source technologies on Azure.

Joe Binder, Principal Product Manager in the Azure team, showed how to run a Spring Boot (Java) app on Azure Web Apps and on Azure Container Service.
Matt Hernandez, Senior Program Manager, demonstrated the end-to-end story for running a MEAN (Node.js) app on Azure with Visual Studio Code and Cosmos DB (a MongoDB drop-in replacement).

Be sure to check them out and try the demo on your own! A special thank you to all of our speakers, our viewers, and the team that made this event possible and such a success.

See you at the next OpenDev in October

While this was the first edition of OpenDev, it’s definitely not the last! We’re working to make Azure OpenDev a recurring event, three times per year, and I’m pleased to announce that the next one will be in October! Sign up for updates and stay tuned for more announcements.
Quelle: Azure

Super Charge Power BI with Azure Analysis Services

In April we announced the general availability of Azure Analysis Services, which evolved from the proven analytics engine in Microsoft SQL Server Analysis Services. The success of any modern data-driven organization requires that information is available at the fingertips of every business user, not just IT professionals and data scientists, to guide their day-to-day decisions. Self-service BI tools have made huge strides in making data accessible to business users. However, most business users don’t have the expertise or desire to do the heavy lifting that is typically required, including finding the right sources of data, importing the raw data, transforming it into the right shape, and adding business logic and metrics, before they can explore the data to derive insights. With Azure Analysis Services, a BI professional can create a semantic model over the raw data and share it with business users so that all they need to do is connect to the model from any BI tool and immediately explore the data and gain insights. Azure Analysis Services uses a highly optimized in-memory engine to provide responses to user queries at the speed of thought.

In this video, I show how you can migrate your Power BI Models to Azure Analysis Service. I also touch on the new feature that have recently been released and what is coming next.

Learn more about Azure Analysis Services.
Quelle: Azure

Amazon WorkMail Now Allows You to Configure Email Flow Rules

Starting today, you can now use email flow rules to filter inbound email traffic for your Amazon WorkMail organizations. This helps you reduce email from unwanted senders, route suspicious mail to junk folders, and make sure important messages are successfully delivered.
Email flow rules can be applied based on specific email addresses, or entire email domains. You can configure email flow rules from the Amazon WorkMail console.
You can use email flow rules in all AWS Regions where WorkMail is offered, and at no additional charge. To learn more, please see Managing Email Flows.
Quelle: aws.amazon.com