My goal here is to document my certification journey and the cloud labs I do to back up the learning. I'd like to give the labs a robotics and IOT flavour when it makes sense to do so.
I figured that keeping track of my journey here might help keep me accountable to myself. Thanks Leszek Ucinski for the idea.
The following link back to Github, or browse the webpage versions using the menu.
✅ Passed ⌛ Booked 🤔 Maybe
I'm mainly concentrating on following the AWS ecosystem and the AWS Architecture Certification path.
Status | Certification | Level |
---|---|---|
✅ | AWS Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02) | Fundamentals |
✅ | AWS AI Practitioner Beta (AI1-C01) | Fundamentals |
⌛ | AWS Solutions Architect (SAA-C03) | Associate |
🤔 | AWS Machine Learning Engineer (MLA-C01) | Associate |
🤔 | AWS Solutions Architect (SAP-302) | Professional |
Neil Davis reccommends doing all three of the Associate level certifications before the Architect Professional. That's the Architect, Developer, and Sysops Admin Associate exams.
I am also interested in the Azure Certifications, in part because I currently work with .NET day to day. Also, Microsoft's investment in OpenAI has lead to tight integration to the Azure platform, whereas AWS emphasizes the versatility of its foundation models through services like Amazon Bedrock, and I think this difference means it's worth looking at both.
Status | Certification | Level |
---|---|---|
✅ | Azure Fundamentals (AZ-900) | Fundamentals |
✅ | Azure AI Fundamentals (AI-900) | Fundamentals |
⌛ | Azure AI Engineer Associate (AI-102) | Associate |
🤔 | Developer Associate (AZ-204) | Associate |
🤔 | Administrator Associate (AZ-104) | Associate (Prereq for below) |
🤔 | Solutions Architect Expert (AZ-305) | Expert |
Down the line, studying for the Google Cloud Architect Professional could be revealing in understanding Google's approach in comparison to the other vendors.
Certification | Level |
---|---|
Cloud Digital Leader | Fundamentals |
Cloud Engineer | Associate |
Cloud Architect | Professional |
Cloud Developer | Professional |
Cloud ML Engineer | Professional |
As I learn more about networking, I am also starting to wonder if the well-recognised CCNA 200-301 might be worthwhile. Yes it's not a developer's necessity, but understanding more about how applications talk to the outside world cannot hurt, especially as part of the Solution Architecture journey.
- Well Architected Labs
- SkillBuilder
- Adrian Cantrill GitHub Resources
- Notes on the above
- Labs Collection
- AWS-SAA-C02-Study-Guide
PDFs for easy access for my old tablet :)