Every day, people visit Reddit and Stack Overflow seeking expert advice about cloud networking and security. We search through those posts and gather a list of discussions and questions that you – the experts – might find interesting or solvable. As always, there are tons of people seeking career advice in IT/cloud networking.
If you’re new to Reddit or Stack Overflow, some tips are below. And if you do respond to any of these threads, share the link to your responses back to this post so others in the community can follow you!
Below are the most recent inquiries.
Thank you!
- Azure, Clouds, AI, and early IT career advice ?
- IT Career Advice with no degree
- Advice on next course to pull up, BS Network Engineering and Security
- Imposter Syndrome is creeping around me..
- Career roadmap advice Has a post-graduate diploma in Network Security.
- New job after 17 years. Everything has changed. Need advice. Overwhelmed; Sr. software engineer…
- Need some help in going towards DevOps Engineer from Infrastructure Eng.
- Is there any sort of selfhosted platform similar to inscape for managing multiple cloud platforms from one dashboard? OCI AWS Azure?
- Can't attach private VIF and Transit Gateway to a Direct Connect Gateway
- EC2 incoming traffic
- Backing up Github Enterprise Cloud
- How would implement what I'd call a "semi-managed" cluster? (Kubernetes)
- Reference URL of load balancer from behind load balancer
Stack Overflow
- NodeCreationFailure: Instances failed to join the kubernetes cluster (AWS)
- Azure Entra ID Groups versus Sync'd AD Groups
- Network Policy Is Not Working in Kubernetes
Tips:
- If posting something self-promotional, be sure to disclose the organization you work for or other relevant connections. (For example: “Full disclosure: I work for secure cloud networking company Aviatrix”)
- Company subreddits (particularly r/AWS) often do not allow specific company/product mentions. If you do post them, they may be removed by moderators.
- Share the link to your responses back to this thread on The Cloud Network so others in the community can follow you.
- Keep up with Aviatrix at r/Aviatrix!