AWS Certifications In 2023 (Why ChatGPT makes AWS Certifications Irrelevant)
Aug 16, 2023
AWS Certifications In 2023 (Why ChatGPT makes AWS Certifications Irrelevant)
FREE Webinar Thursday at 1:00 PM EST or Monday at 7:00 PM EST, learn how to become a cloud architect https://my.demio.com/ref/01ppStEkIUVx … \r Get our Interview Guide today, https://gocloudcareers.com/interviewg…\r \r FREE AWS Certified Solutions Architect Video Course, Exam Guide, and Lab Demos https://gocloudcareers.com/AWS-exam-g…\r \r Learn more about our award-winning training programs at https://training.gocloudcareers.com \r Learn about our Elite Cloud Architect Program, https://gocloudcareers.com/elite-clou…\r \r Learn about our How to Earn More Money in Tech Program, https://gocloudcareers.com/how-to-ear…\r \r Sign Up for Our Updates, https://www.gocloudcareers.com/form-o…\r \r Not only do we explain the difference between cloud architect vs cloud engineer, but we answer your questions to help you learn how to become a cloud architect or how to become a cloud engineer. Ever wanted to know exactly what is a cloud engineer or what is a cloud architect, then this session is the place for you. Wondering whether you should be an AWS cloud engineer or an Azure cloud engineer, come and ask us. What to learn more about our cloud engineer course or our cloud architect course then ask us.\r \r Every day we speak with people looking to build their cloud architect careers. Unfortunately, many people are confused by the various cloud computing job roles, such as the difference between a cloud architect vs cloud engineer. This makes it hard to build your cloud architect career development program, which is necessary to get the right cloud computing career training.\r \r Our goal at Go Cloud Careers to is to help as many people as possible figure out there path to getting cloud hired so they can become successful as quickly as possible!\r \r FREE AWS Certified Solutions Architect Video Course, Exam Guide, and Lab Demos https://gocloudcareers.com/AWS-exam-g…\r \r FREE CCNA Networking Bootcamp – • CCNA Networking Bootcamp \r \r FREE AWS Advanced Networking Bootcamp – • AWS Advanced Networking Bootcamp Nove… \r \r Visit our blog - https://www.gocloudcareers.com/blog/\r \r Visit our website - https://www.gocloudcareers.com\r \r Please follow, like, or subscribe to us on our other platforms: \r \r Go Cloud Architects Facebook Page: \rhttps://www.facebook.com/gocloudarchi … \r \r Mike Gibbs LinkedIn Page: \rhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/michael-g…\r \r Go Cloud Architects LinkedIn page: \rhttps://www.linkedin.com/company/go-c … \r \r Twitter: \rhttps://twitter.com/Gocloudcareers 00:00 Intro 2:00 Topic Introduction \r 10:25 - ChatGPT launches 5 EC2 instances behind an application load balancer 14:20 - ChatGPT creates an IAM Policy 15:45 - ChatGPT creates a s3 Bucket policy 18:45 - Ask ChatGPT why to avoid DynamoDB 21:30 - Questions from the audience 30:20 - Ask ChatGPT about Virtual Machines on AWS, GCP, and Azure 31:10 - Back to audience questions 45:25 - ChatGPT creates a CloudFormation template for a three tier website secured by AWS WAF and Shield 49:45 - ChatGPT creates a bash script to launch apache web servers on amazon linux 51:10 - ChatGPT uses python to script a random password generator 51:50 - Back to audience questions \r #cloudarchitect #cloudcareer #cloudjob
Content
0.089 -> Please register for our webinar we'll teach
you everything that you need to know in that
4.22 -> to your questions along the way hope to see
you there?
83.979 -> Right everybody, welcome to this, I guess
you'd call a public service announcement live
120.85 -> stream on YouTube Live.
122.31 -> My name is Chris Johnson.
124.11 -> I am the Chief Operating Officer here at go
cloud careers.
128.09 -> I'm joined by Mike Gibbs is our founder and
CEO.
131.19 -> Boom, there's our titles.
132.31 -> I forgot to have our titles on there first.
134.52 -> But yeah, so this is an impromptu live stream,
Mike asked me to put this together, kind of
139.78 -> at the last minute here.
140.959 -> That's why he just got me and Mike here.
142.94 -> Alonso might be popping in but Alonso is in
the middle of some other things.
146.63 -> So today, we're gonna be talking about chat
GPT.
151.08 -> And in particular, how jet chat GPT is going
to be making AWS certifications irrelevant.
157.12 -> AWS certifications, Azure certifications,
basically Chachi PT changes everything.
163.15 -> So we're going to be given, given some examples
of how Chet GPT is going to be affecting things
171.129 -> like AWS certifications, cloud formation,
all kinds of things.
176.47 -> So Mike, this is your show.
178.87 -> You're asked me to put it together, you're
in charge of this one.
182.25 -> So yeah, let's get going.
186.299 -> So even if you don't know me, I'm the CEO
of go cog careers.
190.9 -> And I've been helping people build tech careers
for two decades.
194.5 -> And I've been an architect now for 25 years.
198.01 -> And I've always been considered a tech futurist.
200.09 -> And I've been helping people build a league
careers and always staying ahead of the curve.
204.53 -> You may know about two years ago, we came
out of the woodwork.
207.099 -> And so we said, tech skills aren't enough.
210.03 -> You must have soft skills, executive presence,
leadership skills, emotional intelligence,
214.73 -> business acumen and the ability to sell to
others.
217.13 -> If you want an elite career.
219.2 -> Now, we knew this was coming.
221.81 -> And while we always talked about a certification
only teaches you the name of a service and
226.45 -> how to configure that service, which is never
enough to get any job.
230.629 -> Right now with chat GPT.
233.06 -> This changes everything.
235.27 -> And I want everyone in the cloud computing
community to know what to do to save their
240.09 -> jobs.
241.09 -> Now, we may be in a recession right now.
243.16 -> And there may have been 40,000 people that
got laid off this week.
245.76 -> But our students are still getting hired.
248.3 -> Just today, one of my students that never
worked in tech now got his first senior Solution
252.83 -> Architect job.
253.91 -> And you can still get hired to as long as
you're on the right side of the curve that
258.329 -> you have the special skills to offer.
260.56 -> Now chat GPT is in its infancy, but it's disruptive
technology.
265.53 -> What is disruptive technology?
266.87 -> It's technology that changes the way we do
things.
269.85 -> It changes the way we live.
271.199 -> You know, when I was younger?
273.009 -> Now it feels like a long time ago, you wanted
to read a movie, we'd go to the store called
277.61 -> Blockbuster Video.
279.78 -> And you'd go to the store, you'd search this
giant place to find a video.
285.5 -> You'd bring the thing to the counter, you'd
wait in line for 30 minutes and they'd say,
288.94 -> Mike, we don't have that video.
291.22 -> So you'd go back to the idols you'd search
for your next video, you'd finally find something
295.89 -> you'd wait in the 30 Minute line and guess
what they didn't have that either.
299.379 -> Finally about two It was later you left the
Blockbuster Video, you're all kinds of excited.
303.8 -> You took your video home, you watched it with
your husband, your wife, your boyfriend, girlfriend,
308.36 -> whatever.
309.36 -> And then you work late the next day when it
was due and you got a $5 late fee, and you
312.9 -> weren't late the next day, by the time you
were done, it took three hours to read a video,
316.97 -> and you paid a $20 late fee.
318.449 -> And then Netflix came and it changed everything.
320.84 -> Well, chat GPT is disruptive technology that
changes everything uses natural language processing,
328.21 -> it can scour the internet and it can learn.
331.75 -> And here's the thing, there are things that
it can't do.
335.949 -> Chat GPT cannot do cloud architecture, Enterprise
Architecture, chat GPT cannot connect with
342.139 -> humans.
343.6 -> It can't take all of the technology vendors
like an architect do and put it together to
348.58 -> improve business performance.
350.26 -> Chat GPT can't lead a team of the best and
brightest throughout the world.
354.699 -> That's good news for you.
355.699 -> This is the future of your career.
358.13 -> But what Chad GPT can do is configure things
and do a lot of the hands on thing.
364.199 -> So if you're an engineer, make sure you focus
on the soft skills, the leadership skills,
369.98 -> because this will improve your technology
no matter what your career is.
374.03 -> And there's lots of great distinguished engineers
that are earning $300,000 A year and what
377.65 -> differentiates them for hands on engineers,
as they still have the hands on skills, but
382.12 -> they can connect with others.
383.199 -> They've got emotional intelligence, they've
got leadership skills, they've got empathy,
387.31 -> they've got executive presence.
389.88 -> And now these are the same skills, which we've
been teaching forever, that are going to keep
394.19 -> you there.
395.19 -> But I'm going to show you why.
396.69 -> Knowing how to write a CloudFormation template
no longer matters.
400.63 -> Knowing how to write a TerraForm script, no
longer matters.
405.31 -> Knowing how to configure something in the
cloud via the CLI no longer matters.
409.2 -> Or we're going to take an architect and architects
like me, who does not touch the tech ever
413.34 -> because I'm an architect.
414.5 -> And I'm going to show you how we can instantly
do many of the things that caught admins do
420.16 -> all the things that certification can do.
422.319 -> And guess what?
423.319 -> Chat GPT can tell you the things that certification
teaches you wrong, all with zero effort.
429.56 -> So I'm gonna give you some samples.
431.24 -> And I'll answer some questions because I want
you all to have the best cloud computing around.
434.33 -> And I always want to make sure you know how
to do the job versus passing a certification
439.36 -> exam.
440.36 -> All this certification is is the name of the
service and how to configure that service.
442.85 -> Employers don't care about that.
444.84 -> And now why is this so important?
446.66 -> All right.
447.66 -> So just to let everybody knows that this is
a, this is not going to be a long, long live
452.97 -> stream, this will probably be about a 20 or
30 minute live stream.
456.85 -> But next Tuesday on our head in the clouds
episode, we're going to do even more discussion
461.91 -> about Jacques GPT.
463.84 -> More possibly more demonstrations, more q&a
opportunity, for sure.
468.979 -> More discussion about chat GPT and how it's
gonna be affecting different roles in different
473.26 -> industries.
474.26 -> But again, today as moksha.
476.289 -> So we're gonna let let Mike, call the shots
here.
480.479 -> Mike, you let me know when you're ready for
me,
482.289 -> I'm ready to share.
483.58 -> Let's show people what this Chachi can do.
485.58 -> Now, before we do this one thing, chat.
487.62 -> GPT is still in beta.
490.18 -> Microsoft just invested $10 billion in this
technology $10 billion, even while it did
496.12 -> a layoff because that's what this technology
can do.
499.319 -> It's
500.509 -> actually let's let's talk about that real
fast.
502.93 -> So there's two sides to that coin.
505.759 -> And as soon as I saw this, I was like, Oh,
wow.
519.87 -> Think we lost Chris over here?
521.479 -> Maybe it's already went up.
525.059 -> So all right.
528.05 -> Here's the thing, $10 billion.
530.269 -> As soon as I get excited about something nice,
what happens?
534.98 -> Anyway, so at the same time, that they're,
they're laying people off, they're investing
544.49 -> large amounts of money into this future technology.
550.089 -> And here's why this technology will give them
extreme competitive advantage against Google
554.86 -> with search.
556 -> And guess what, this technology will enable
them to create software five to 50 times faster
561.03 -> than they ever could before, even with less
workers.
563.82 -> So you're gonna see a lot coming from here,
but we're gonna keep this pretty specific
567.43 -> to cloud.
568.43 -> Now, when somebody takes a cloud certification
course is what they learn the name of a service,
572.58 -> which is irrelevant when it comes to these
things.
574.71 -> It's what the technology is how to tune the
technology, how to optimize the technology,
578.99 -> not the name that a marketing department made.
580.94 -> And I'm going to give you an example of that,
and how to configure it.
584.54 -> Now on a certification course, they teach
you how to click a bunch of boxes in the management
588.4 -> console.
589.4 -> Nobody does that.
590.4 -> It takes too much time and too much effort
and companies aren't going to waste their
593.76 -> money asking people to click boxes.
595.98 -> They're going to use things like CloudFormation
scripts, TerraForm scripts or the command
599.43 -> line because it's better and faster.
600.82 -> And we're always looking for speed and velocity
when it comes to paying people.
605.33 -> So now what I want to do is I want to show
you how we can actually do the things that
611.32 -> are literally talked about in certification.
614.61 -> And then I'm going to show you where it does
things better than certification.
617.94 -> So Chris, if you want to share my screen,
I'm going to ask Traci do something very simple.
622.87 -> And then I'll show you where the human intervention
is still needed.
626.709 -> We're going to ask Chachi PT to create an
AWS CloudFormation script to launch five EC
632.08 -> two instances behind an application load or
something that would be taught in certification.
638.149 -> And here, we're going to ask Chachi, pte.
639.79 -> I'm going to cut and paste this question into
it.
642.399 -> Now, remember, Chachi PT is still in beta.
644.95 -> So but watch what it's doing.
647.2 -> It's automatically creating my CloudFormation
template.
653.98 -> It's spitting out an entire configuration.
662.63 -> And mind you, I don't need to know anything
to do this.
667.05 -> Nothing's zero.
672.33 -> Okay, well, it's still spitting out a configuration,
then we're going to talk about what this means.
681.05 -> And I'm going to do some things that are even
more complicated.
683.26 -> And I will tell you and show you where this
will need a little bit of tuning.
689.97 -> Once we finished the script,
691.18 -> I've got some tech issues.
693.54 -> I'll be right back.
695.44 -> And obviously, that's fine, Chris will come
back.
698.04 -> And I'm going to tell you where you fit in.
699.87 -> Because guess what, if you learn the right
skills, you'll be 10 times more valuable knowing
704.77 -> how to use these tools.
707.13 -> But if you don't learn the right skills, this
will replace people.
710.589 -> And that's why I wanted to call your attention
to this as a public service announcement,
714.31 -> get the right training and the world's going
to fight for you get the wrong training, and
717.59 -> you're stuck.
718.59 -> So as we can see, right now, I asked Chuck
GPT to create a CloudFormation script to basically
723.27 -> launch a load balancer and five, easy two
instances.
726.68 -> Now granted, there are certain things that
we're going to need to replace, which needs
730.57 -> to be tuned.
731.57 -> And guess what Chachi PT even needs to tell
you the subnet IDs, your security group IDs,
736.6 -> and the appropriate values gun.
738.44 -> Now, that's one of the more complicated things
that is taught in NA to do a certification
743.029 -> done in seconds by technology.
745.779 -> Now, what this doesn't know is what tech to
use, why to use the tech, how to tune the
751.99 -> tech, how to present the tech to your customers
how to lead your customers in the right solution.
755.96 -> It doesn't know any of that.
758.23 -> That's what architects do.
759.339 -> And that's what a distinguished engineers
do.
761.16 -> But if you're training focused on certification,
you'll be out of a job, but learn the soft
766.64 -> skills, human skills, how to use the tech
to impact business performance.
771.649 -> And you'll earn more now, how much does it
matter, I'm going to tell you right now, statistically
775.54 -> speaking, individuals with the highest levels
of business acumen earn on average $549,000
780.12 -> a year.
781.4 -> And I'll give you some examples of that when
we're done.
784.029 -> But this kind of stuff is replaced by technology.
787.04 -> Now, we could have one really great cloud
engineer do 50 people's jobs with this technology.
792.04 -> But we don't need cloud admins anymore.
794.38 -> So we're gonna focus on that.
795.97 -> Now, I'm going to do ask you to do something
else that people would typically ask things
799.82 -> to do.
800.82 -> Mike, before you do that.
802.55 -> I just got back, you might have mentioned
this already.
804.66 -> But I know I told you previously.
806.399 -> My favorite thing is the note at the bottom.
809.76 -> It gives you the little caveats.
811.67 -> It's like hold on, you know, you may want
to do some other things.
814.32 -> Or you may want to increase this or change
that and even add in little, little little
822.93 -> footnotes for you that that blew my mind.
826.88 -> Exactly.
827.88 -> When I saw that I was like, okay, so not only
does it build this template that may or may
831.97 -> not be the best fit, but it's really good.
834.41 -> It gives you some pointers to say, here's
the next, here's the way to optimize.
840.41 -> Exactly so even tells you know, one of the
things it's a little more on the complicated
844.37 -> side in the AWS Certified Solution Architect
Professional is they get involved in the s3
848.42 -> bucket policies and writing in these in these
JSON policies.
851.85 -> Now, guess what?
852.98 -> I don't know JSON.
853.98 -> Why?
854.98 -> Because I'm an architect.
855.98 -> And I don't code but I'm going to ask it to
write an AWS bucket policy.
860 -> And what I'm going to ask it to do when this
now I'm going to create an im policy.
863.91 -> First, I'm going to ask it to create an im
policy that allows a user access to everything
868 -> other than I am Guess what?
869.92 -> Poof, now, remember, we're in beta.
873.269 -> And this is before the $10 million that Microsoft
actually invested.
877.8 -> So it's spitting out an im policy.
880.53 -> And look how smart it is.
882.5 -> It's gonna deny I am because I asked it to
and it's gonna allow everything else.
887.949 -> No knowledge necessary on the user, other
than what needs to be done.
892.82 -> Now Architects like me make blueprints.
897.019 -> There I've been people typically to play this
Now think about this.
901.66 -> One person can do this all day long for customize
things to whatever's necessary and replace
907.11 -> 1020 or 30 people.
908.529 -> So you've got great careers, as long as you
focus on what the tech can do for the business,
912.959 -> the leadership skills, the sales skills, the
executive presence, communication skills and
917.32 -> learning how to integrate the tech multicloud
technology that can do you can do well.
922.67 -> And you'll always have a job in that, but
not with us.
925.279 -> Now, everybody knows me.
926.91 -> I love cats, right?
928.54 -> Everybody knows I love cats.
930.73 -> And I've got this cat, Cindy, who's the most
beautiful thing.
933.44 -> I adopted her a year ago to say, to make my
wife happy.
937.199 -> And Mike had Cindy's like my second favorite
thing in the world after my wife.
940.21 -> So I'm going to now create a AWS bucket policy.
943 -> And what's this bucket policy going to do?
945.5 -> It's going to allow access to everything other
than the photo called Cat, which has got photos
951.21 -> of my beautiful cat, Cindy.
953.04 -> So again, I'm not a JSON programmer, I'm going
to ask chip HR GP to do it, and look what's
957.85 -> going to happen.
961.54 -> And sometimes it's a little slow.
962.959 -> And sometimes we have to refresh it.
964.54 -> Remember, it's in beta phase.
966.8 -> Oh, it's gonna take a couple of days.
969.85 -> Sometimes
970.85 -> it's really slow.
971.85 -> And every once in a while, the servers too
busy.
972.85 -> And if it's too busy, I'll show you what you
need to do.
974.949 -> But sometimes it has to think,
977.43 -> actually, the only time that I that I ever
tried to go on chat GPT I don't know if that's
982.861 -> the verb, correct?
984.47 -> correct way to say it, but try to use chat
GPT actually got to a page that said, That's
989.56 -> too busy.
990.56 -> Oh, well.
991.56 -> Now I see where the $10 billion is gonna go.
995.38 -> Yeah.
996.38 -> So right now this is in its infancy stage.
999.04 -> But don't worry.
1000.55 -> $10 billion will make it.
1002.53 -> So
1003.53 -> this is more time for you to come up with
those simple sentences that runs everything.
1008.279 -> Let's do this.
1009.279 -> Let's, let's just try to refresh the screen.
1010.88 -> And we'll do it again.
1012.22 -> Yes, you can see a warning.
1013.9 -> Yeah, there's a warning.
1014.9 -> It was too busy.
1015.9 -> So let's ask it to do it did it for me this
morning.
1019.75 -> And I might just be tired right now.
1021 -> Because I mean,
1022 -> I wouldn't be surprised if it's busy.
1024.15 -> I mean, it's, yeah.
1026.26 -> Imagine how many sentences you could come
up with create an AWS s3 bucket policy that
1031.92 -> allows the access to everything other than
a folder named cats.
1036.35 -> I could come up with 100 of those in the span
that we're probably waiting on this to, to
1041.589 -> do what it's going to do.
1044.76 -> And this morning has spit it out in a couple
of seconds.
1047.26 -> But it but if we if not, we'll go to something
else, then we'll go back to this when the
1051.68 -> server is a little less busy.
1056.77 -> The beauty TV, oh, here we go.
1064.14 -> Now Microsoft spent $10 billion, what do you
think this is gonna do for them?
1067.29 -> Yeah.
1068.29 -> It was kind of like being on hold.
1075.799 -> Yeah.
1077.02 -> are getting a busy signal a phone, if anybody
knows what that is anymore.
1080.6 -> And next, and guess what we're going to show
you.
1083.03 -> I'm going to get into a few more things.
1084.75 -> But I'm going to show you why.
1086.159 -> It's smarter than your certification.
1089.049 -> Oh.
1090.679 -> And of course, it tells you exactly what you
need to replace.
1101.75 -> Wow.
1106.28 -> Now one of the problems about certification
is they do vendor brainwashing, you should
1110.62 -> use this elastic compute service, you should
use this Dynamo DB.
1114.82 -> But the reality is when you use something
like that, it locks you into a single vendor.
1120.49 -> And it puts you in a position where you can't
do multi cloud can have critical availability
1124.17 -> and miss out on some of the greatest things.
1126.33 -> So, you know, let's talk Let me ask why I
should avoid DynamoDB let's see what it tells
1132.73 -> me.
1133.73 -> So let me clear my conversation out over here.
1136.53 -> And and when you take a certification, it's
not going to be smart enough to tell you this,
1140.21 -> they're going to try and brainwash you into
doing things that are bad for your customer.
1143.47 -> Now let's ask it Why should avoid a proprietary
database like Dynamo DB in a multi cloud environment?
1148.34 -> Let's see if it's smart enough to answer that.
1149.99 -> bet it is.
1151.32 -> At least when it wasn't busy earlier today
when I played with it.
1154.881 -> It gave me a great answer.
1156.39 -> Let's see if it's been training on your YouTube
channel.
1158.9 -> Let's see if it comes up.
1160.13 -> It's starting to answer Oh, well see it's
answering it see already smarter than your
1169.93 -> AWS Certified Solution Architect Professional.
1173.57 -> locked into a specific cloud for Yeah, this
thing has been training on your YouTube channel
1188.15 -> so here's what it'll tell you what you won't
learn your certification.
1191.22 -> A proprietary database made like Dynamo DB
may limit your options for running and managing
1196.57 -> your application in a multi cloud environment
using a proprietary database may mean that
1201.12 -> you're locked into a specific cloud provider,
and unable to easily move your application
1205.49 -> to another cloud provider or on premise infrastructure.
1208.28 -> Additionally, and this is the key proprietary
databases may not have the same level of compatibility
1213.669 -> with other services, or have the same level
of support for open standards as a non proprietary
1218.78 -> database.
1219.78 -> These factors could make it more difficult
to achieve flexibility and freedom and freedom
1223.87 -> that a multi cloud environment can provide.
1225.53 -> So right now, this application is smarter
than anything that's being taught to you.
1231.001 -> And your certification will ask you to configure
a little more things.
1234.13 -> But, you know, I saw one of the certification
providers telling people, and he made a big
1239.38 -> LinkedIn post about it, that he taught people
how to create a high availability website,
1244.12 -> of course, on a single network, and he talked
about CloudFront.
1246.9 -> Now you can't have a high availability system
on a single content delivery network.
1254.15 -> So do we think that this system is going to
be smart enough to do it?
1258.97 -> Well, let's ask it.
1260.99 -> I'm going to ask it for a high availability
website.
1263.87 -> Do I need more than one content delivery network?
1266.08 -> Because we've got certification providers
trying to tell people they're teaching high
1269.71 -> availability.
1270.71 -> So let's ask Chuck GPT, which we know is smarter
than than they are?
1274.35 -> Let's go.
1275.35 -> Let's ask it.
1276.35 -> So it says.
1280.6 -> So let's get to some questions after this
one, there's a couple of questions that I
1284.31 -> definitely know that you would want to address
over here in the chat box before we get to
1287.93 -> some more fun demos.
1289.34 -> Okay, let me ask some questions.
1291.48 -> And then I'll stop screen sharing.
1293.69 -> And then I'll get I'll definitely address
some more fun demos, because I got some cool
1297.84 -> demos.
1298.84 -> And it's exciting.
1300.36 -> All right, give me just one second.
1304.77 -> So all right.
1305.77 -> So there's there's a couple of questions in
the chat box.
1308.419 -> From Kenya.
1309.419 -> Goodness, what?
1310.419 -> Oh, no, not that one.
1311.419 -> Not that one, that there's a better one.
1313.159 -> There's a better one.
1314.529 -> There's a better one here?
1315.67 -> Yeah.
1316.67 -> Is this the future of cloud architecture,
designing, selling, presenting, and then using
1319.75 -> chat GPT?
1320.75 -> Well, this gives more responsibilities to
the architect.
1323.7 -> Hold on, follow up.
1325.549 -> I just thought the Cloud Architect will become
responsible for using this AI tool.
1330.61 -> Kenya, I want you to understand this.
1333.39 -> This makes cloud architects go from $200,000
a year to three, four and $500,000 a year
1338.101 -> because their expertise is using this tools.
1342.08 -> So a company will ask an architect, hey, how
do I get rid of these 30,000 software programmers
1346.179 -> that I have?
1347.43 -> How many do we really need that are AI enabled?
1349.76 -> Remember, the cloud architects job or the
enterprise architects job is how do I improve
1353.45 -> business performance with technology.
1355.789 -> So the Cloud Architect becomes much more valuable,
much more valuable, much more valuable.
1359.77 -> And guess what, you're not going to take some
of the cost one two to $300 an hour, and ask
1364.61 -> them to configure things.
1366.19 -> So it's going to keep us further away as architects
from the technology.
1372.179 -> Now, the people that are engineers, we're
still going to need some.
1380 -> And what kind of engineers are we're gonna
need, we're gonna need really, really great
1384.309 -> engineers, engineers with extreme competency
in a single area, not a jack of all trades
1389.7 -> and a master none.
1390.7 -> So the 10x AWS Certified person, right for
the employment line.
1394.52 -> Now the person that knows one thing and knows
it really well, will be augmented by artificial
1399.419 -> intelligence, and that one person can replace
10 regular people.
1403.44 -> So the key is, we may have a really good database
engineer for relational databases, they can
1409.909 -> use a tool like this, set up their queries,
set up their things, and they need to be great.
1416.309 -> And this person is going to mean to communicate
with the architecture team and the business
1419.72 -> team.
1420.72 -> And this person is going to have to help manage
other people, but one of them can replace
1424.74 -> 1020 3050 People that are tech only people
hands on only, I don't want to talk to people.
1430.789 -> And because employers don't like having them
around anyway, they like happy people.
1435.12 -> So this will get rid of this.
1436.65 -> So you know, Chachi PT will be augmented to
help people.
1440.97 -> And Chris, why don't you add a little bit
because you've got a great HR background.
1443.81 -> Yeah, well, so this is not this is not going
to be an added tool.
1448.909 -> For architects, architects aren't going to
be the ones to implement the chat GPT engineers
1456.16 -> and developers and, and the software people,
they're the ones that are still going to be
1460.29 -> doing this, but they're going to be doing
it with chat GPT and like Mike said, instead
1465.7 -> of having 10 Now you just need one that can
do all 10 Because now they have chat GPT to
1475.23 -> make it just like that, to do their do their
engineering, just like that.
1481.539 -> The architects not going to be utilizing chat
JpT day in and day out the engineers will
1489.149 -> which will end up in again, the work of 10
engineers being done by one are just 510 15
1499.84 -> Whatever The case might be kind of like, the
industrial resin revolution with textiles
1505.919 -> and looms.
1506.919 -> And it when you when the Industrial Revolution
hit a job of 10 people in a textile factory,
1512.97 -> it could be done by one person, all of a sudden,
because the the introduction of the machinery,
1518.309 -> same concept here.
1519.539 -> Those are the those are the roles that are
going to be the impacted.
1528.529 -> It's the certification only people are the
people that only have some basic tech skills,
1533.899 -> the ordinary average person, but what we're
dealing with is 1000s and 1000s.
1538.85 -> And 1000s of engineers being replaced by technology,
and some that are going to be so good and
1544.549 -> highly paid because they're masters of it.
1547.27 -> So you know, the key is, you know, think about
it you Chris, there was a couple other questions
1551.74 -> we can address.
1552.74 -> Trying to get Tom, give me just one second,
you can keep talking, but then I'm going to
1557.98 -> interrupt you.
1558.98 -> And now we're
1559.98 -> back.
1560.98 -> Again, remember, this is just the infancy
as graphics process performance per unit processors
1565.289 -> increased 70% per year, we can do 10 times
more with that.
1569.43 -> Now also, what you're seeing is a lot of this
artificial intelligence is moving off of GPUs.
1574.77 -> First it was CPUs and GPUs.
1577.01 -> And it's moving on to something called application
specific integrated circuits and fully programmable
1581.309 -> ASICs, which can do things three and five
and 10 times faster than this.
1585.59 -> Google already has ASICs that are three times
faster than then graphics processing units,
1590.529 -> and they're spending billions and developing
that as well.
1593.429 -> How will this affect security?
1594.429 -> Well, Eric, it's gonna affect security in
two ways.
1597.64 -> And recently, a major publication asked me
about it.
1600.5 -> So as an offensive security person, I can
use chat GPT to help generate some scripts
1607.49 -> to run things like NMAP and Open VM s and
other things to figure out what the vulnerabilities
1612.059 -> are.
1613.059 -> And guess what, Eric, the defensive security
people and the engineering side can use chat
1618.14 -> GPT, to also write some remediation scripts.
1622.26 -> So it's going to help hackers, and it's also
going to help security engineers.
1626.669 -> Now the key is, and we've always said, when
it comes to technology, it's not how to configure
1630.299 -> it.
1631.36 -> Anybody can be taught to configure anything,
and that's before Chachi btw, it's knowing
1635.14 -> what to configure and why to configure it.
1638.331 -> And that's the difference between an engineer
and an admin.
1641.29 -> For example, I like to use BGP because I love
BGP.
1644.559 -> Now, if I know that I need to load share without
getting out of our packets, I know I've got
1649.23 -> options, I can change the weight, the local
preference as far as the origin, the med.
1654.039 -> And I know which one would do it best in which
situation.
1656.47 -> Now I can tell I can tell somebody how to
configure that, that's me, that's easy, but
1661.059 -> knowing what to do, and why to do it, it's
going to be there.
1665.51 -> But with this can't do is it can't sell a
solution.
1669.08 -> It can't convince a CEO or build an ROI model
to do these things.
1673.73 -> And what you'll see as I hate to say it, but
you're going to see an a greater wealth graph
1677.27 -> and disparity, that people that know have
these elite skills, the communication skills,
1681.88 -> the soft skills, the business acumen, which
are already the highest paid, people will
1685.62 -> be paid even more.
1687.37 -> And the people that have the low level tech
skills, they're gonna have a hard time.
1691.46 -> So tech skills, the What the Why the how,
and the application combined with the communication
1697.01 -> skills, soft skills, best jobs in the entire
world.
1700.84 -> And if you know how to leverage this technology
will be great.
1707.169 -> I
1709.32 -> think that's a pretty safe assessment there.
1711.89 -> Just a general broad, simple statement.
1714.45 -> Is it safe to say the closer you're working,
the architecture, the safest the opportunities
1719.01 -> are?
1720.01 -> Yeah, I think if you replace an architect
with customer, yeah, that will be applicable
1724.19 -> to even more roles.
1725.67 -> But if you're talking about cloud computing,
then architecture to a degree maybe Sales
1731.269 -> Engineer roles, maybe.
1733.789 -> But definitely, the closer you are to architecture
and the customer.
1737.5 -> Yes, say for your opportunity, the
1740.289 -> safer you're gonna be.
1741.289 -> And you know, we felt so strongly about it,
that in our engineering program, we focus
1746.559 -> so much on soft skills, communication skills,
executive presence and leadership to make
1751.54 -> sure that our engineers always had these competitive
advantages, because those are the things that
1755.69 -> are going to help the engineers
1756.69 -> all right.
1761.309 -> How should a cloud architect interact with
catch up and work?
1765.25 -> You shouldn't?
1766.25 -> You shouldn't you need to have the knowledge.
1768.2 -> Yeah, having the knowledge and being were
kind of like what, what we're doing is just
1772.82 -> tinkering and playing around.
1774.49 -> That's about the depth that you should go,
but
1776.87 -> but I will give blusa I will give you an example.
1780.25 -> And in fact, I'll give you a good example.
1782.83 -> So when I tell people to learn the cloud,
I'm going to just share this real quick.
1786.169 -> Yeah, I'm when I tell people to learn the
cloud.
1789.48 -> And then they asked me but Mike, I don't understand
what you mean by learn the cloud.
1794.71 -> What if I don't know the name of a service?
1796.96 -> And I say if you understand how to drive a
car, you You can drive any car.
1801.059 -> And if I say for example, if you know what
a virtual machine is, it doesn't matter whether
1806.659 -> you're in Azure, AWS, Oracle, Google.
1810.51 -> So let me ask you a question.
1812.46 -> Let me ask it.
1813.46 -> And this will be the kind of question an architect
would ask, what's the equivalent of a virtual
1817.07 -> machine on AWS?
1818.14 -> GCP and Azure clouds?
1820.489 -> Because I just know, I need to question interview
question.
1825.01 -> It's also what I need to know, as an architect,
hey, if I'm at the AWS store, what do I need
1829.83 -> from the Google Store?
1830.83 -> What do I need, and a cloud is nothing more
like going to the grocery store?
1834.39 -> If you need eggs, you can buy them from any
of the stores.
1837.63 -> So let's ask it.
1838.63 -> Let's see if Chachi PT is smart, smart enough.
1842.85 -> Let me go try and refresh this because I've
asked it this before, and it's already given
1846.46 -> me an answer.
1847.46 -> So let me try asking that question one more
time.
1856.799 -> Okay.
1859.69 -> So there you go as a multi cloud architect,
guess what?
1862.82 -> You now know how to answer the question.
1864.94 -> You know, you need a virtual machine.
1867.33 -> And and there you go, you asked an architecture
question, hey, I need a virtual machine, what's
1875.139 -> it called?
1876.35 -> And that's why that nonsense in your certification,
where they tell you, this is an E, this instance,
1880.639 -> this letter means this.
1882.029 -> And I say know what a virtual machine is,
and go to the website and Google that every
1884.809 -> single time, same thing.
1888.149 -> Yep.
1890.36 -> Let's see.
1894.779 -> See, another security question you just to
answer that when it came in while you're at
1904.389 -> right before you put it out there.
1908.83 -> See, I'm saying that there might not be any
more questions, I may just be active chat
1919.91 -> today.
1925.82 -> React says Would that data scientists and
machine learning professionals be in a much
1928.99 -> higher demand as a result of such technology
disruption?
1931.679 -> That's what I'm really curious about.
1933.95 -> Because I know if you if you if you've seen
some of our previous live streams, when people
1939.6 -> ask about what we individually think the future
is, I've always said that, along with cloud
1946.919 -> data, anything data is going to is just going
to continue to grow and grow exponentially.
1953.919 -> So I'm really curious as to what's in store
with this, because I, there's all kinds of
1961.13 -> possibilities.
1962.13 -> Mike, what are your thoughts?
1964.21 -> So what I think is, yes, this will create
more engineering opportunities in the data
1969.649 -> science and machine learning world.
1971.25 -> But and here's the but at some point, our
AI can also write our Python scripts.
1976.76 -> In fact, I'll write a Python script with an
I don't know Python.
1979.59 -> I'm an architect.
1980.59 -> I'll write a Python script today.
1982.789 -> So Riyadh, what I'm going to show you is,
the farther away you get from the tech, and
1987.889 -> the closer you get to your customer, the better
off you're going to be.
1991.049 -> And, you know, there's certain things in data
science, which I think are going to be great.
1996.28 -> So the data scientists that really know how
to analyze the tech, and take that tech and
2002.44 -> present that tech to business leaders in a
way to make better business decisions.
2006.85 -> Those jobs, hugely valuable.
2009.42 -> But the number crunchers and the data engineering
people I see again, being as less as less
2015.779 -> important.
2016.779 -> So the closer you are to the customer, the
closer you are to helping the customer make
2020.169 -> more money.
2021.169 -> Yeah, I see a lot there.
2022.279 -> But I do see jobs for machine learning engineers.
2025.61 -> But remember, engineering can easily be outsourced
to machine learning type things.
2030.47 -> And also, engineering can be outsourced anywhere
in the world, because geography doesn't matter
2035.429 -> anymore.
2049.599 -> I see.
2050.599 -> How will Microsoft and Azure use this?
2051.74 -> Who?
2052.74 -> Oh, wow,
2053.74 -> I got a couple.
2054.74 -> I have a I have a couple of theories on this
one.
2056.349 -> Well, first, Microsoft is going to integrate
it into Bing.
2060.54 -> And now you got a choice.
2061.54 -> When you Google something, you can get the
Fred's at Martha's website, or Billy Bob's
2065.52 -> website, which has no credibility whatsoever.
2067.96 -> Now, people like me, if I want to read something
from AWS, I got to AWS Why not somebody's
2073.97 -> blog?
2074.97 -> So but not everybody does.
2076.01 -> So first, you can ask a question and get a
better answer than you probably can with Google.
2080.31 -> So this now gives Microsoft extreme competitive
advantage against Google.
2083.97 -> And it will, I believe, give Microsoft being
a major thing.
2088 -> How scared is Google?
2089 -> They call it an internal code read about it.
2091.84 -> So this is terrifying Google.
2093.26 -> Now how else will Microsoft do it?
2095.089 -> You know, I think Microsoft has about 300,000
employees.
2099.15 -> You got to assume about Hundreds 1000s of
programmers can't Can you Google that for
2102.93 -> me?
2103.93 -> Chris?
2104.93 -> How many employees at Microsoft?
2105.94 -> Microsoft?
2106.94 -> Probably?
2107.94 -> How many?
2108.94 -> 55,000?
2109.94 -> Before the 55,000?
2110.94 -> What?
2111.94 -> How many employees?
2113.16 -> Does Microsoft have?
2114.18 -> Yeah, only
2115.18 -> 55,000
2116.18 -> It's 55 Before the layoff.
2117.849 -> At least that's what that's what the Business
Insider article said.
2122.79 -> Let me check.
2123.79 -> Yeah, I think that's like
2124.79 -> go figure Yahoo search is not as good as good.
2134.54 -> Okay,
2135.54 -> Microsoft said approximately 221,000 employees
as of June 30.
2138.81 -> Okay, so if you figure 25% of them are programmers,
they could probably get rid of 50% of their
2145.25 -> programmers with technology like this.
2147.14 -> So Microsoft, if they're a heavy partner in
this can probably develop software at a much
2152.89 -> greater velocity.
2154.07 -> So two to three times faster than their competitors
at a lower cost.
2157.62 -> So what's that going to do?
2158.7 -> It's going to increase their profitability,
increase their ability to sell new products
2162.78 -> to their customers, which can in turn raise
their stock price.
2166.46 -> So I think it's going to be a big boom for
Microsoft investors.
2168.91 -> This is not investment advice.
2171.069 -> But, you know, I think this will have a major
impact on shareholder value, which that's
2175.82 -> what the CEOs job is to increase shareholder
value.
2179.8 -> All right.
2183.27 -> All right.
2186.73 -> So look, who decided to join us there, we
got on
2194.33 -> so from my chin.
2196.23 -> Hello, we're
2197.25 -> hot off the presses there, Alonzo, you're
just in time to fire not for some more demonstrations
2202.65 -> of the beauty of Jacques chat GPT.
2205.839 -> Yeah,
2206.839 -> well, we're gonna have some more fun with
this.
2209.68 -> But remember, when we're dealing with Chachi,
PT, or any automation, we are in beta right
2213.63 -> now, beta, and microscopist, is spending an
additional $10 billion.
2218.87 -> So when we're in beta, we're not going to
expect the quality to be as good as it's going
2222.67 -> to be with $10 billion dollars.
2224.89 -> Gutsman, it's already had to, we have to remember
that right now, the technology needs human
2232.14 -> oversight.
2233.22 -> So I can generate 100 scripts per per hour.
2236.56 -> And maybe I need somebody smart enough, that's
capable enough to go edit those 100 scripts
2240.92 -> per hour.
2241.92 -> And maybe they can do 15 scripts per hour
than they could have before where they could
2244.47 -> do two or three.
2245.79 -> So yeah, huge, huge, huge improvement.
2247.71 -> I'm about to bring up something here.
2251.43 -> Alex says, In a world where customers are
asking for on prem solutions, I'm really surprised
2261.17 -> how dazzled VR from this AI.
2263.24 -> So there's two things here that if AI is anywhere
on prem, cloud, anything, and we're dazzled
2272.81 -> by what it's going to do to industries.
2275.22 -> Yes, it's a disrupter.
2277.099 -> It's a disrupter.
2278.5 -> What it's doing now is just a very small percentage
of what is capable, just like the $9 billion,
2288.81 -> that the Pentagon invested in multicloud is
just the beginning.
2292.93 -> Yeah, we're where we're dazzled by the implications,
2298.97 -> exactly that
2300.5 -> that this stone being cast into the water
is going to have
2304.99 -> the ripples there.
2306.46 -> That's I think that's I'm not sure about dazzled
but we as our prospective, understanding what
2313.52 -> that's going to do to jobs, what's this going
to do to the industry, these are just the
2317.29 -> initial concepts that are being rolled off
of the assembly line.
2321.609 -> So you think about if you look ahead to 12
months from now, let alone three to five years,
2328.55 -> about how that's going to affect jobs, how
people who this technology is, is heading
2336.339 -> for in trajectory, what they're going to need
to plan for to escape the reverberations of
2343.44 -> this, this is what we're thinking of on a
short and learn long term scale.
2348.26 -> So that's, that's it's not us focusing on
AI, but it's focusing on what this is going
2353.829 -> to do to people.
2355.23 -> What
2356.23 -> exactly, and that's the difference between
engineers, and architects, architects are
2360.261 -> all focused on the tech.
2361.829 -> I don't care what the underlying tech is,
as an architect, I need to know how to design
2365.4 -> it.
2366.4 -> I'm care what it can do for business.
2367.4 -> So in my village in Greece, which is tiny,
it has 5000 people, but it recently got up
2372.07 -> to 10,000, because there's been an immigration
and they don't have any sophisticated tech
2376.04 -> people in this village.
2377.53 -> Now this Phillips can all of a sudden start
to create software and things that they never
2381.77 -> have, you know, villages all over the place
are there.
2385.8 -> But you know, that's what we're talking about.
2387.78 -> Yeah.
2388.78 -> And then the next part I definitely so customers
on our challenge are given a logistic regression
2394.04 -> and make a business decision, but somehow
now businesses will trust software as a service.
2398.89 -> Ai Come on now.
2399.89 -> Oh, that's, that's nope, nope, nope, no, at
all.
2401.97 -> I never said that at all you're reading?
2404.39 -> Oh, we are saying that this is a tool.
2407.88 -> This is like the best hammer you have ever
had.
2411.68 -> Yeah, that the person that is responsible
for convincing the customer to make a business
2415.89 -> decision will be using.
2418.11 -> They are not going to anybody that trusts
AI completely without any oversight, or any
2427.63 -> tinkering or any tampering.
2429.34 -> That's, that's, that's a bad, bad.
2432.19 -> That's a bad decision.
2433.63 -> We could use
2434.63 -> the Skynet example all day long.
2438.619 -> But But yeah, so it's, I think, I think we're,
I think our excitement about the possibilities,
2446.24 -> is really getting getting us away from the
message of this is a tool.
2450.8 -> This is a tool, this is a tool that simplifies
the job of the people that are responsible
2456.099 -> for doing the things that you're talking about
here in this post.
2459.119 -> And it makes no customer no everyday customer
like me, the CEO Oh guy.
2465.19 -> I'm not gonna I'm not gonna trust the machine.
2468.39 -> But I'm gonna trust Mike and Mike are Alonso.
2471.77 -> Exactly.
2472.77 -> And I don't know if Mike and Alonzo use the
machine, but I'm going to trust them.
2476.64 -> And
2477.64 -> the key is, someone like me will use the machine.
2480.14 -> But you know, when I design an architecture,
it takes me 50 people, yes, if there's some
2484.94 -> information from data science that the organization's
collected from their petabytes of data that
2488.9 -> they run through machine learning algorithms,
hey, wait, that gives us some inferences to
2493.13 -> predict.
2494.13 -> We can then ask the customer Hey, have you
seen this, it gives us more predictive value.
2498.97 -> When we're designing architecture, we're taking
business problems, and we're solving it.
2502.6 -> I remember when my organization helped develop
one of the first black box trading systems
2506.88 -> in the financial market back in 1999.
2509.19 -> We had a bunch of mathematicians that were
looking at historical news information to
2513.26 -> determine whether to buy sell or trade.
2515.62 -> And it did it at a speed and velocity faster
than the traders.
2519.1 -> And this thing was making millions of dollars
a day.
2521.44 -> Was it perfect?
2522.53 -> No, but it was better than the traders were.
2525.54 -> And it was faster than the traders were and
the company made millions and millions and
2529.41 -> millions of dollars off of it because it was
good.
2532.22 -> And yes, every bank has blackbox trading system
for the last two decades because of it.
2536.27 -> Do they still have manual traders?
2537.88 -> Yeah.
2538.88 -> Do they periodically evaluate these things?
2540.03 -> The answer is yes.
2541.03 -> But they are tools.
2542.81 -> That's why we have drone airplanes with the
military uses to but we still up things that
2546.04 -> are piloted by people.
2547.96 -> The better the tools, the better the information,
the better your information, the better your
2552.271 -> starting point, the better you're out.
2554 -> So I got choices.
2555 -> I can hire a human.
2556.15 -> And I want you to understand this from a business
perspective, Alex, here's what an employer
2560.03 -> faces, I got a person that comes in says I
want work life balance, then the person gets
2565.2 -> sick, then the person wants health insurance.
2567.14 -> And I gotta worry about the person asking
for a raise or go on strike.
2570.79 -> Ai doesn't get tired.
2572.55 -> And yes, this is disruptive technology, it
will change the world.
2576.48 -> But like anything else, as I mentioned, it
doesn't have communication skills.
2579.68 -> It doesn't have leadership skills, doesn't
have executive presence, doesn't have the
2584.06 -> ability to build an ROI model for my customer
can't convince my customer to sell things,
2588.8 -> but it's the start of something.
2590.35 -> And remember, it's beta, beta.
2593.46 -> Yeah.
2594.66 -> And with an additional $10 billion, it's gonna
get a whole heck of a lot better beyond anything
2599.339 -> you can possibly dream of.
2601.619 -> And that's just Microsoft's $10 billion in
investment.
2604.74 -> You don't think the other companies are gonna
add 1020 3040 50 billion $100 billion?
2609.04 -> You don't think the banks are going to be
using this?
2610.52 -> They sure will be depends, depending on how
2612.78 -> good their their shares are.
2615.569 -> Yeah.
2616.569 -> Banks are using artificial intelligence to
they go to end video.
2621.07 -> And they have huge numbers of servers that
are packed with GPUs.
2625.73 -> And they've got all got their own data scientists,
but they also need a cloud solution.
2629.059 -> So it goes both ways.
2630.559 -> You're never gonna see one check.
2633.08 -> You gotta you got some more examples here,
Mike.
2635.21 -> Yeah, I'll do a couple more because this is
kind of cool.
2638.41 -> And then we do have
2639.41 -> to wrap up everybody as much as we'd love
to stay here as all day long.
2643.43 -> But guess what?
2645.1 -> Tuesday 6pm.
2646.22 -> Eastern time, we're gonna be back again.
2648.59 -> It's gonna be we're gonna be talking more
about this on our head in the clouds show
2651.5 -> on Tuesday.
2653.41 -> And hold we can't wait to see.
2656.04 -> See more of you.
2657.6 -> So Mike, looking forward to some.
2662.05 -> Some more examples.
2663.099 -> Yeah, let's, let's have some fun with it.
2666.579 -> Yeah, the purpose is to point out that this
changes, the relevancy of certification skills,
2676.7 -> and how important our lack of importance these
skills now hold because of the ability of
2685.839 -> things like chat GPT to as you previously
saw, write a template to do engineering or
2692.63 -> to do configuring it's it's changing the game
for for config duration, maintenance, etc.
2703.85 -> So here we go.
2704.85 -> Let me bring this up.
2706.45 -> So now let's get a little more complicated.
2709.359 -> Let's ask it.
2710.359 -> And obviously, it still needs to be edited.
2711.569 -> But it's even going to tell you where let's
ask it to create a CloudFormation script.
2715.11 -> I think AWS calls it a template.
2717.28 -> But it's really a script for a three tier
website with an Internet Gateway that's secured
2721.24 -> by AWS, WAF, and shield, pretty much the whole
basis of the certification.
2725.68 -> Let's see if we can do it.
2729.96 -> Create an AWS CloudFormation script for a
three tier website with an Internet Gateway
2734.64 -> secured by AWS WAF.
2736.222 -> And shield.
2738.99 -> single cloud Oh, no.
2740.37 -> Yeah, I mean,
2742.22 -> it's cranking
2745.24 -> it is over stacking, copy this code, just
kidding.
2754.589 -> To automated people going to over gone and
copying code off the internet.
2762.66 -> Yeah, so that's the reality of nobody made
some code anymore.
2773.45 -> And that's the thing, it's still probably
going to be needed to be edited.
2776.53 -> So instead of writing the stuff, now we've
got something that's an incredible starting
2780.63 -> point where one person can edit those things
faster than doing it.
2785.15 -> And that's the mic.
2788.23 -> Yeah.
2789.23 -> So when this produces this template, or the
script that's in this platform, and this is
2794.619 -> literally me, as somebody that's not used
this because my one time to try and use it,
2798.181 -> it was too busy.
2799.53 -> So I'm assuming I copy this and paste it into
my script editor.
2806.91 -> Nope.
2807.91 -> And okay, and then go from there.
2809.859 -> That's it.
2810.93 -> And if I'm using a really nice one, then we
color code and say that this is broken.
2814.53 -> I need to fix this and Okay, yeah.
2817.53 -> Cool.
2818.53 -> Cool.
2819.53 -> It's gonna even tell you which parts you need
to modify in the end.
2826.99 -> But imagine what imagine now you've got somebody
really good.
2831.05 -> And then they're augmented by by this.
2833.71 -> So they can take this it can it can up speed
up their workflow.
2836.73 -> So the closer you are to the customer, the
more business communications leadership skills,
2841.109 -> it's not affected by this.
2842.109 -> Yeah.
2843.109 -> Did you just stop it?
2844.88 -> No, it's not perfect.
2846.64 -> Sometimes it gets a little stuck.
2848.4 -> Okay.
2849.4 -> Actually,
2850.4 -> I think he stopped.
2851.79 -> I think he accidentally stopped it.
2855.18 -> I may have accidentally stopped it.
2856.97 -> I think I did.
2859.31 -> Yeah.
2860.31 -> You started typing something in it.
2862.05 -> I did.
2863.05 -> I started typing all I can ask you to do if
you're curious.
2864.57 -> And then oh, I'm even going to ask you to
write a basic Python script.
2869.15 -> Yeah, Anakin says he's going to ask it to
create Skynet.
2872.339 -> Please don't.
2873.339 -> No, no, thank you.
2875.26 -> If you do James Cameron is going to come ask
him for his loyalty.
2879.48 -> Sometimes
2880.48 -> it runs out of words and characters to like
if you're asked to write something that's
2883.93 -> but but as a rule, I mean, think of it printed
out a full one for me yesterday.
2889.44 -> But it can't do architecture.
2892.45 -> Just create says you can type continue when
it runs out of tokens.
2897.28 -> Okay, interesting.
2901.24 -> You can ask them Oh, I like that.
2903.8 -> Is it it?
2904.8 -> Or is it them?
2905.95 -> How to deploy this?
2907.3 -> Yeah, you probably could actually create it.
2908.41 -> Maybe I turn around and ask it, how to deploy
it.
2910.47 -> Okay, here we go.
2911.73 -> It gave us what we wanted this time.
2915.32 -> Now, you know, one of the things that the
teach a little bit about in certifications
2922.18 -> is how to write a little bootstrap script,
which is a little bash script to launch like
2925.309 -> an Apache web server.
2926.4 -> In fact, I saw someone actually writing a
whole blog about it, it was like 20 pages
2930.5 -> long.
2931.5 -> Wow.
2932.5 -> And I was like, why it's three, three lines
long.
2933.91 -> Yeah.
2934.91 -> Golden images and such.
2936.609 -> Yeah.
2937.609 -> So let's
2938.609 -> actually create a Linux bash shell script.
2941.95 -> And after we're done this and ask it to create
it to launch an Apache web server on XSplit
2945.6 -> will be careful, even say, Amazon Linux.
2950.78 -> And just to be fair, we're now by no means
are we experts on this.
2954.579 -> No, we're just playing.
2956.599 -> We're Yeah, we're executives.
2958.67 -> We're executive I'm a CEO.
2962.089 -> Playing around with this belt, we see the
implications for the people that we work with.
2968.88 -> And so
2969.88 -> I and that's the thing we see.
2973.569 -> And my job for the last 25 years has been
advising companies, the world's largest companies,
2978.6 -> biggest banks, biggest internet service providers.
2981.19 -> How do you stay ahead of the competition with
technology that's what architects do.
2984.53 -> I also was a strategy consultant for business
as well.
2988 -> So let's ask you to write a write a bash long
bash script like a bootstrap script.
2993.099 -> Yeah, you should not be sweating.
2994.569 -> Yeah, you are way beyond this.
2996.48 -> Yeah.
2997.48 -> PR you got good business skills, leadership
skills, communication.
3000.67 -> and skills.
3002.43 -> While we're waiting on this, there's actually
a question that came in that I wanted to address
3007.54 -> after the demonstration, but we can.
3009.67 -> Okay, there we go.
3011.16 -> I was gonna ask this question, what about
packages and dependencies?
3017.77 -> Okay, so it tells you what packages and dependencies
you need.
3023.01 -> Wow,
3024.22 -> what's this?
3026.63 -> This is
3027.63 -> me.
3028.63 -> Okay.
3029.63 -> Wow.
3030.74 -> Yeah.
3031.92 -> And then, you know, hey, let's try to let's
write a Python script.
3036.66 -> It went and installed the package.
3038.67 -> Yes.
3039.67 -> I mean, it's got the it includes the code
for go for installing the package.
3045.72 -> Obviously didn't do an install it.
3047.71 -> But But yeah,
3048.77 -> wow, yes.
3049.77 -> Sudo yum update, which is updates the operating
system that installed the HTTP daemon.
3054.099 -> When we're when I was taught when you and
I were talking about this other day, and I
3057.48 -> was talking about the data analysis, the data
science, that was the thing that was in my
3061.02 -> mind, what about packages and dependencies
and things like that.
3063.52 -> So it'll include that.
3065.49 -> And that's part of your code.
3067.94 -> And let's do one more to prove a point on
let's write a Python script to create a random,
3073.31 -> random, random secure passwords.
3077.44 -> I'm not a programmer or an architect, so let's
even code.
3096.38 -> Doesn't look complete yet?
3097.619 -> Let's see what else we can do.
3102.01 -> So Well, while we're waiting on that, this
is the one that I saw earlier that that we
3107.47 -> can talk about for a split second, as Ben
says, how do you separate yourself if everyone
3113.27 -> has checked GPT?
3115.2 -> Alright,
3116.2 -> here's the key.
3117.39 -> You are more than the tech.
3118.77 -> So when we're talking about architects, and
let's end on this, and that it's
3123.38 -> not just architects, but engineers, to me
an age of chat GPT and AI.
3130.29 -> Tech is just a tool.
3131.73 -> Yes.
3132.73 -> So, you know, here's the thing, if you're
a carpenter, the hammer is not what makes
3138.19 -> you special, right?
3139.46 -> It's the ability to use a hammer, a screwdriver
nails, knowing how to measure knowing where
3145.849 -> to cut, it's just a tool.
3148.26 -> Yes.
3149.26 -> And to any piece of technology is just a tool.
3152.54 -> Now, if your whole focus is on learning one
tool, this makes you irrelevant.
3158.559 -> But if you're a professional, this makes this
supports you and makes you better.
3164.13 -> So you know, when I learned to practice internal
medicine, we actually had less tools complete.
3171.36 -> And I remember, here's an example, Desmond,
a patient had what was called a macular papular
3176.72 -> rash.
3177.72 -> And I'm trying to send a patient to a dermatologist,
I knew the patient had a condition and I said,
3181.71 -> the patient has a six inch maculopapular rash.
3185.3 -> That's one centimeter wide.
3188.23 -> Now the dermatologist knew what a maculopapular
rash was, that was six inches long and one
3192.809 -> centimeter, right?
3193.809 -> You know, we do now Desmon, we take a picture
of it, and we send the picture to the dermatologist.
3198.79 -> See, it was snowing, what what it was just
the way of May of communicating it, it changed.
3204.92 -> Now I've got a camera, which is actually the
tool.
3207.589 -> But before that what I actually had was the
description.
3210.77 -> So what it does is change things.
3212.15 -> And just to prove a point that it actually
finished, we can see that it actually did
3215.69 -> finish the random number generator script.
3218.08 -> And not only did finish the random generator
script, it even tells us where we should change
3222.829 -> our passwords and things like that.
3224.53 -> So it did everything for us.
3226.829 -> That's
3228.04 -> that's, that's amazing.
3231.69 -> But you know,
3233.359 -> it tells you how it does.
3235.55 -> It doesn't do.
3237.51 -> We have
3238.51 -> to remind people as you know, as a movie reference,
we got to remember that, like say for instance,
3243.53 -> Tron that movie it, they've rebooted it, and
they've come up with different versions over
3247.77 -> the years.
3248.849 -> You have your programs in that world, however,
it's the user or the innovator itself that
3254.07 -> you can't replace, you can't replace gravitas.
3257.25 -> Intuition, you can't replace a lot of these
very important qualitative qualitative skills
3264.44 -> that you can write code for.
3265.98 -> So again, you know, it's about innovating
yourself getting wrapping yourself in insulating
3271.359 -> yourself with soft skills, emotional intelligence,
being able to have that human component, that
3276.799 -> human element that keeps you out of the steamroll
of this technology.
3282.569 -> Yeah, and someone someone talked about data
science and machine learning.
3287.66 -> Same thing with those roles, those roles having
the ability to communicate, and the findings
3293.329 -> the are the needs for more information or
more input, having the ability to communicate
3298.93 -> that information.
3300.349 -> Yeah, in the soft skills to get that infant
and get what you need and, and make your points.
3309.569 -> So important in those roles as well, it's
just so it's just, you know, while we speak
3314.74 -> mostly in a towards architecture roles or
engineer roles, this, this is going to have
3322.839 -> implications throughout every aspect of the
tech industry, let alone aspects of every
3330.109 -> industry marketing, my Alonzo, what can imagine
what can be done from marketing with technology.
3336.64 -> I mean, campaigns that take weeks and months,
just for one asset, just for one asset.
3346.369 -> Now, you get an asset and 130 seconds a minute,
3350.26 -> yeah, you can, you know, it's, it's a, it's,
it's a lot like, you know, first man, you
3358.16 -> know, running into fire, you know, for the
first time and trying to understand and contemplate
3362.662 -> what it is and what those ramifications are,
you know, and I noticed may be very dramatic
3367.75 -> to say, but, you know, I can say, Okay, I
want to market about XY and Z, and it'll lay
3375.48 -> out a plethora of ideas, or I did some research,
and there was a high school student, or rather
3382.38 -> high school teacher, and it was writing entire
exams with key code.
3387.47 -> So now, immediately, from a student's perspective,
a lot of universities are banning Chet GPT,
3394.43 -> because as you can tell, it will open the
doors that you yourself have to use your own
3400.13 -> personal learning experiences to to create
that competency.
3404.549 -> And that just blows it all out the water.
3406.66 -> So how are you going to fight against that?
3410.24 -> You know, how are you going to like Case in
point, you can't, but your thing is, like
3414 -> I said, Before, you can't teach innovation,
you can't teach gravitons you can't teach
3418.68 -> any of these things know that it right, it's
creating code for so it's to my point, I strongly
3425.51 -> believe coding, developing, it's not enough,
we're not even close find something, imagine
3431.089 -> putting a automated script on this or, or
some sort of step function where you tell
3437.299 -> X, Y and Z to write this all day long while
you're sleeping and, and it continuously lays
3444.47 -> it all out.
3445.58 -> It, it's it's intended,
3447.589 -> and I'll show you where the certs are irrelevant.
3449.38 -> But think about it from a global perspective.
3452.21 -> $100,000 in the US is equivalent to $28,000.
3456 -> In India, I still need some engineers that
are smart enough to fix the scripts.
3460.19 -> So now, I can pay $15 an hour to somebody
in India to get a really great programmer,
3465.96 -> which is the equivalent of $100,000 in the
US.
3469.41 -> And I can send them 100 scripts, or 200 scripts
a day, and they can fix them.
3474.15 -> So it's the human side.
3475.741 -> Now let's talk about the difference between
certification knowledge which is worthless,
3480.119 -> it's the name of the service and how to configure
that service.
3483 -> And guess what the name of the service doesn't
matter.
3485.829 -> And how to configure that service we just
showed you, the tech can actually do versus
3489.69 -> actual knowledge.
3490.75 -> So certification knowledge is an s3 is where
you store your stuff on AWS, here's how you
3496.95 -> can configure it.
3497.95 -> I don't need anybody for that.
3500.589 -> And I'm not going to pay for that.
3501.829 -> And that's why certifications won't get anybody
hired.
3503.99 -> Now, if you ask me, if Alonza asked me asked
me, What's the difference between object storage
3508.47 -> and block storage, what I should use and why.
3511.02 -> Mike, what is the difference between object
storage block storage, how you should use
3515.569 -> it and why?
3516.69 -> Okay, Alonzo, let's talk about both of these
storage options.
3519.38 -> They're both what's called storage area networks,
which means they're accessed over a network.
3524.07 -> I'll, I'll be and their application is completely
different.
3526.85 -> I'm going to begin with object storage.
3528.809 -> With object storage, we have the data which
is broken down into little things called objects.
3533.48 -> Now each object is what's special about object
storage is object storage has data about the
3538.39 -> data.
3539.39 -> It's called metadata.
3540.39 -> So I take my data, I provide some information
about the data.
3544.97 -> Now when we go into this, what happens is
we now have the ability to identify all of
3549.94 -> the data in our object storage.
3552.03 -> Now we can't use object storage and connect
it to a server like a hard drive, or like
3556.9 -> block storage, which we'll get into a minute.
3559.03 -> But what we can do is we can use it for backup
and archival purposes, software distribution,
3565.42 -> video distribution, and such.
3568.119 -> The reason we cannot attach it to a server
is as follows.
3572.26 -> With object storage, we have what's called
write once read many times.
3575.67 -> And when we write once read many times.
3577.869 -> The reason is this is the second anything
is touched or modified by even a 10th of a
3582.41 -> percent.
3583.41 -> Here's what ultimately happens, it creates
a new version.
3586.2 -> So imagine attaching it to a file server,
a regular server, which has a swap file, which
3590.76 -> is one and a half times the memory.
3592.81 -> So you got a terabyte of memory you got a
one and a half terabyte swap file and it changes
3596.4 -> 60 times per second.
3598.52 -> We would have 61 and a half terabyte objects
per second.
3601.14 -> So object storage is useful for backup and
archival purposes.
3603.65 -> None of that's taught by the way in certification.
3606.5 -> But that's the knowledge that you need to
understand it, I could do the same thing for
3609.93 -> block storage that's not covered in certification.
3612.44 -> Now, a cloud engineer needs that knowledge
that let's make some special.
3617.17 -> The Cloud Architect again needs that knowledge.
3619.44 -> That's what makes them special.
3621.599 -> But was taught in certification, here's the
name of a service, how to configure that s3
3624.77 -> bucket, we already did it.
3625.77 -> We did it in seconds, and wouldn't need to
know anything.
3629.44 -> So the key is called knowledge, very beneficial
architect knowledge, very beneficial cloud
3635.28 -> engineer valance, very beneficial expert,
programmer knowledge very beneficial.
3640.37 -> But if you're an ordinary average programmer,
and you don't have the soft skills, communication
3645 -> skills, leadership skills, and you don't know
how to solve business problems with technology,
3649.03 -> that's who's in danger by this, the ordinary
average programmer, the ordinary average common
3654.23 -> people whose training revolves around certification
versus competency.
3657.95 -> They're the people that are stuck.
3659.359 -> So master your career, do not waste your time
and get 10x, AWS Certified or 10x, Google
3665.77 -> certified or 30, certifications, being an
expert at your job, train like an Olympian,
3671.349 -> trained to be the best.
3673.119 -> There's always a need for the best connected
to the business problem you're trying to solve.
3678.619 -> You're always needed.
3679.72 -> Be the person with the best attitude, you're
always needed.
3684.31 -> Bring out the best in others.
3686.76 -> Alonzo can take 50 people and make them all
happy and excited to work.
3691.91 -> That's far better than if he was just good
at his job.
3694.29 -> If he can make 50 People work 20% better.
3696.97 -> Hey, guess what, he added an additional either
five or 10 people to the team.
3701.16 -> I didn't have to do the math in my head on
the fly.
3703.4 -> But you know, that's the point.
3704.51 -> So those are the skills that make you there.
3706.559 -> So, you know, we train people to be the best
with have all these skills.
3711.049 -> But you know, took me $325,000 education to
learn these skills.
3714.9 -> Well, odds are you have $150,000 education.
3716.809 -> Well, yeah, Chris, you have the same?
3718.68 -> Yep.
3719.68 -> Why do you think we invented our clutter cutter
Career Development Program, a program that
3723.099 -> gets people jobs, I had a student today that
became a senior cloud architect, and he never
3726.609 -> works in tech before in his life.
3729.25 -> First job during a time where organizations
are getting laid off.
3732.77 -> So whatever you do, just focus on being the
best.
3736.88 -> Don't let certifications drive your goal.
3739.069 -> Let knowledge drive your goal.
3740.44 -> Let your career drive your end goal.
3742.72 -> And if you're with us, great if you're not
with us as someone with a principle title,
3746.7 -> or a distinguished title, or a director title,
because they've already made it and they can
3750.94 -> guide you to your career success, but stay
away from anybody new, because they're lost,
3755.319 -> stay away from anybody with an associated
title, because they're still there, what's
3758.441 -> called a trainee.
3759.869 -> And what happens is they either graduate their
traineeship, or they get fired, and they don't
3764.359 -> do it anymore.
3765.359 -> So stick with people that had been around
for a while, but be the best, the best be
3767.85 -> the best, because they want to have great
careers.
3770.39 -> I wish I had more time, but other media's
actually contacted me for comments they do
3774.23 -> so all day.
3775.23 -> If you haven't seen my article in Forbes this
morning, please check it out.
3778.02 -> My team will provide the link and below.
3779.799 -> Media reaches out to me every day because
we have such a reputation for getting people
3783.64 -> hired.
3784.64 -> I want you to see us on Tuesday night we're
going to talk much more about this.
3787.01 -> But I just wanted you to focus on this because
public service announcement focus on focus
3791.349 -> on being great at your career.
3793.22 -> Don't worry about certifications, the tech
can do the certifications for you.
3797.529 -> And it comes from your Alonzo
3799.059 -> couldn't agree more Mike?
3801.48 -> The parents how long do we have to talk Mike?
3807.47 -> As long as you want.
3809.299 -> All right,
3810.299 -> Alonzo, let's hear your thoughts about chat.
3813.64 -> GPT.
3814.71 -> And what your thoughts are like your conclusion
conclusions?
3818.289 -> Oh, no conclusions is the right word.
3820.279 -> But closing comments for today's session.
3822.42 -> Yeah, I would definitely say guys, I surmise
that this is definitely putting a lot of people
3828.3 -> on notice when it comes to just relying on
technology without honing their ability to
3835.369 -> create bonds, social strengthen their social
component or social element.
3840.02 -> And you know, nothing is ever going to replace
people.
3842.42 -> This is not Skynet.
3843.8 -> This is not us being in the matrix where the
Merovingian or or anything else, the creator
3851.589 -> or however you want to define it.
3854.12 -> But it is something that as we continue to
move on into that tech, that it's just very
3859.48 -> important that people learn to step it up
when it comes to their their social element
3865.39 -> and creating that that gravitas, that leadership
being able to socialize within a team because
3871.51 -> I know a lot of cloud engineers, they may
not want to engage or feel like human engagement
3878.69 -> is their strong suit, but it puts that component
that that notice in there that you need to
3886.109 -> start honing some additional skills other
than engineering.
3889.86 -> What about you, Chris?
3892.22 -> Yeah, so just a couple of comments here.
3894.599 -> And then of course, I'm gonna have a lot more
on Tuesday night.
3897.86 -> I'm really looking forward to Tuesday.
3899.63 -> It's gonna be exciting.
3900.94 -> A little known secret about me, I like to
code sometimes.
3905.349 -> So I get excited about this type of stuff.
3908.7 -> This, a couple of people brought it up in
the chat box about, what about this?
3913.18 -> Or what about that?
3914.18 -> You know, what if it's not perfect, what if
it's not right?
3917.05 -> But so this is not something that's going
to kill every job.
3922.5 -> This is something that's going to drastically
change the landscape of jobs, it's not going
3926.7 -> to get rid of the engineer role, it's not
going to get rid of the admin role.
3930.829 -> It's not going to get rid of the developer
role.
3932.96 -> It's just going to turn them into scarcer
roles, more.
3936.76 -> What's the word I'm looking for more nuanced,
or niche roles, that will require more nuanced
3950.369 -> or niche skills than just the tech, the engineer,
the future is going to be able to do the amount
3958.029 -> of the work of multiple engineers have today
or just a year ago.
3963.48 -> Same with the developers, there still going
to be the need for those roles, but not to
3967.52 -> the volume that we've been used to, in any
way, shape, or form.
3972.81 -> Just like it's the same thing with the with
with McDonald's, and their kiosk at the thing,
3979.46 -> think about five years ago, 10 years ago,
you would go into McDonald's, and there would
3983.109 -> be five or 10 people at the front counter,
to be able to take orders.
3988.109 -> Now there's one person maybe, but also responsible
for the coffee and the cookies and the water.
3994.65 -> But, but that's because of the kiosk.
3996.7 -> So it does, it's not going to replace completely
that role of the engineer, the developer,
4001.279 -> that that role is still necessary, it's just
not going to, you know, we got 100,000 openings
4005.47 -> for an engineer, now you're gonna have 10,000,
not 100,000, you know, there are going to
4013.65 -> be fewer and far between.
4016.48 -> So when asked about will will just kill jobs
or create jobs, whoa, both.
4025.279 -> It's going to every advance Alonzo, you're
muted.
4029.05 -> Every advance in every industry in every,
every generation has ultimately led to the
4037.47 -> growth in jobs.
4038.47 -> It's just where will those jobs grow?
4041.19 -> The more and more and more and more humans
are getting more and more into service related
4046.589 -> roles, instead of production related roles,
that's probably going to continue happening,
4053.03 -> just because of the nature of automation,
humans are going to be able to have more opportunities
4059.539 -> to do things that require somebody to provide
a service to them, instead of to produce something.
4067.27 -> Because production can now be done by machines.
4070.849 -> And production is the thing that's going to
continue to be automated by machines.
4075.72 -> The service, which is where all these skills
come in that we continue to talk about that
4081.64 -> service is what's going to continue those
service related roles, whether it's customer
4087.029 -> service, customer management, account management,
desk relations, those types of things, those
4092.87 -> types of roles will continue to grow.
4097.469 -> Anyway, I can go on and on and on about the
the about this, and I look forward to talking
4104.67 -> about it.
4106.51 -> Next week, on YouTube, on on our head in the
clouds show.
4112.54 -> But before we wrap it up, I know I didn't
start off the show talking about these things.
4117.94 -> But I do want to tell remind everybody know,
every week on Thursday, we did one just yesterday.
4123.92 -> But next Thursday, we're going to do a webinar
about how to get your first cloud job.
4130.089 -> So make sure to register for that the link
is in the description.
4134.27 -> It's also I'm gonna put it in the chat box
over here.
4138.04 -> So make sure you register for that we talk
about what Cloud architects do what, what
4143.89 -> what hiring managers actually want, how to
what you actually need to know, learn the
4148.94 -> tech, the dot tech, the all the skills that
you actually need that or desire.
4154.78 -> We talk about how to deal with HR and and
it just we've gone over everything that you
4164.631 -> need to know and we answer your questions.
4167.19 -> So make sure to join us on that.
4171.87 -> And I think just want to close it out.
4180.54 -> I want to thank everybody for coming and joining
us today.
4183.45 -> It's been a fun show.
4184.679 -> I'm glad we decided to do this one at the
last minute glad Alonso was able to pop in
4188.719 -> and due to Mike for showing us those examples.
4194.489 -> And whoever said they're gonna build Skynet
in the chat box please I hope everybody enjoyed
4202.78 -> this show.
4204.679 -> And I hope everybody has a great weekend.
4207.14 -> Don't crash chat GPT over the weekend.
4209.94 -> I know many will.
4211.239 -> All right.
4212.44 -> Thank you, everybody.
4214.23 -> Have a great evening.
4216.62 -> Take care everybody.
Source: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XeOS8BxiZaU