![]() Or the minimum number of days objects have to be in an S3 standard bucket before I can lifecycle them to IA, or that the same number is lower for Glacier. Or how many IOPS I get per GB of block storage. Or to cram into my head the max number of reserved instances I can have. I do tend to get jaded when I'm asked to remember that 65,000 IOPS calls for one type of block storage over another. The Associate-level exam is very much reminiscent of the CompTIA exams, except that the trivia is at least relevant in exposing me to features of AWS I might find useful in applying DevOps and serverless concepts. The Solutions Architect exam at least according to Adrian Cantrill is very much the entry point to whatever level you want to be in (Associate or Professional) in that the other ones tend to build upon the knowledge of the Solutions Architect exam. I was referring to the Associate-level exam. So in a lot of ways it is a $150 certificate that proves you have worked with these technologies and know them to a level an architect working with AWS would need to, which would generally be paid that $150k amount. Most people will need 2-3+ years of solid experience to have a decent shot at passing. Maybe through unethical means and leaked questions you may be able to memorize, but ethically there is NO WAY you are passing that test without at least one full solid year of hardcore sleeves-rolled-up AWS experience. In my opinion there's no way you can study for that test, so I didn't. I've been doing cloud engineering full time for 6 years and recently passed on my first attempt with 845/1000 (needing 750 to pass). Many questions are VERY nuanced, and not even in a "gotcha"/"tricky" way. Respectfully, having passed Solutions Architect Professional "ocean-wide, inch deep" isn't accurate. System Administration, Networking & Help Deskįor Computer Science Career Questions: /r/cscareerquestions Think a sub should be added to a group let the mods know! Multi-reddit collections of common subs by discipline. State of IT - Great Summary Response Created by /u/jeffbxĪ few tips for new IT graduates and entry level Friday: Read Only (Books, Podcasts, etc.).Wednesday: What would you like to know?.Recommendations on ways to improve the sub? Contact the mods!.In some cases they may be temporary and as they become permanent rules will be updated. ![]()
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