Almost everything runs on Linux — from servers to smartphones. If you're in tech, you'll run into it everywhere. Mastering it isn't optional, it's essential.
If you've done on-call support as a DevOps engineer, you know the struggle — peaceful sleep becomes a luxury. Even when there's no alert, your mind stays on edge, haunted by what you might’ve missed.
As a DevOps engineer, you don’t need to use 100+ tools. Even with just a few, what matters most is the value you create. If you focus on that, you're doing it right.
Corporate teaches the system and politics—you climb slow. Startups toughen you through chaos—you fight fear head-on. Founders and businessmen play a different game. In the end, it’s peace vs money. You choose. — Unknown DevOps
Malcolm Gladwell says it takes 10,000 hours to master a skill.
Josh Kaufman says 20 hours is enough to get started.
I’m following the 20-hour rule to learn new DevOps skills. Start small, stay consistent.
Synthetic monitoring is great for tracking third-party URLs and distributed nodes. In Web3, decentralization reduces the need for constant monitoring—but in the early stages, it's still crucial for stability.
ubuntu + wine + server issue at midnight
headphones on, beautiful song on loop
mind in peak flow, fixing bugs like magic
midnight debugging hits different 🚀🧠🎶
Hi, I am a Senior QA consultant, having more 19 yrs of experience in Web, #Web3 and Mobile #testing. Currently, looking for an opportunity. Please guide and/or RT. #blockchains #QA