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. Some are career guidance, which is where your experience and advice matters.
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 for helping the cloud networking community!
- Which cloud provider has the best Kubernetes experience?
- How do ya’ll network engineers know so many technology
- Which CompTIA Certification Should You Get First?
- Cloud Support Associate Career Path; Curious about your advice on which domain would be a good starting point if I want to pursue either of these paths in the future.
- Separate China into its own tenant? Azure question
- Link Private DNS Zone Azure VWAN, New to Azure, please help.
- Application Gateway and static web app backend
- What’s the difference between Network Administrator and Network Engineer?
- Learning about networking in the hope of landing a fruitful career. Seeking advice
Stack Overflow
- Internet-facing A Issue Connecting to EC2 Instance
- LB not accessible from within VPC
- Error Syncing Pod Python Dataflow Workers
- ECS task timeouts connecting to RDS
- Using GitHub private runners to access azure resources behind VNET causes runner to not have...
- map(object) with list(string) in terraform
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!