Thank you so much! Your analogy using nickname, cell phone #, and SSN to describe public, private, and elastic IP addresses helped TONS understanding them!
Oh! I thought you were genuinely confused by this video, but it's the opposite. Phew! 😅 I'm so glad it helped. Thanks for watching, and welcome to the channel! 🙏🤓
Yes really ur tutorials so much worthy👍👏👌🙏🤝. Less time deal with needed crucial subject only, so many other channels made bore lengthy and complex even for simple solutions also.
This content is absolutely amazing. Always Straight to the point. I understood more in these 10 minutes than in maybe few months of reading. Thanks so much for your efforts !!!
Hey, I love your AWS content-it's super helpful! I would really appreciate it if you could create a hands-on video on a Python AWS migration project. It would be amazing to see how to manage the migration process step-by-step. Thanks for all your hard work😎!
This content is amazing, I understood much better than in my college classes. Thank you very much. Could you make a tutorial of the code deploy service?
Oh, I'm so glad! :) I'll add Code Deploy to my list for future videos. I have several other topics in the queue already so it might take some time, but stay tuned, and thanks for watching!
Best tutorial ...Awesome explanation ....You have really unique teaching skills that sets you apart from other youtubers, madam !! Difficult concepts made easy
Oh, that means a lot--thank you! 😊 If you don't have a networking background, I think these concepts can be hard to grasp in AWS. I know I struggled to learn them initially as well. Thanks for watching!
Great Video! How do you decide on what CIDR range to start with when you create a new VPC? Also, I think normally a company designs several VPCs under one account (i.e production, test, development, etc.), How do you allocate CIDR for each?
Hi moe! 👋 To pick a range, you'll want to start with something from the RFC 1918 (private) range, such as "10..." or "172..." (see around 09:40 in the video for more about this). And then the subnet mask (the "slash" number) depends on how many IP addresses you need. A "10.0.0.0/16" for example, would give you 65,536 addresses (if you need fewer than that, you could go with a larger number, like /24, which would give you 256 addresses). So really depends on the size of the network you need. As far as how many VPCs to create, it's complicated. 😊 This article probably does a better job than I can: www.linkedin.com/pulse/aws-vpc-best-practice-journal-eric-l/. You could also look into multi-accounts (one for prod, dev, test, etc.), working with Control Tower, rather than multiple VPCs. Hope that helps get you started!
Excellent! Is the organization size and subnet mask based on total number of employees or the number of servers the company will have in cloud? It seems if you have 500 servers you would have to use a subnet mask to allocate 65,536 IPs since that is the next number available after 256 IPs.
after tasting this type of teaching we should not want to miss u plzzz come to udemy with full fledged course,these bits and pieces wont do justice to anybody either its u or to the learners,ur knnowldge shouldnt be going unnoticed,plzz consider this request for udemy,thank u
Thanks for the nice comment, @mulesofttraining! 🥰 I DO have a full AWS Cloud Practitioner course on Udemy at the moment (Solutions Architect Associate coming soon): www.udemy.com/course/aws-certified-cloud-practitioner-master-aws-fundamentals/. Hopefully it helps! 😊
Hello mam please create more and more videos on AWS, I really love your style of explaining things with practical and hands on examples. I regret why I see your channel so late
Thank you so much for helping me unlock the mystery of IP addressing! You have made it much easier to understand than most conventional IP tutorials and I appreciate that! Cheers!
@TinyTechnicalTutorials You are the best AWS content creator and tutor that explains best and makes it simple to understand. am so glad that i subscribed to your account. always love to come to you to learn more and simply explained videos.😊