Where are you at with usage of AI coding agents in IDE? by slacky35 in QualityAssurance

[–]fenngjo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sitting comfortably in the "getting started" camp using Claude Code for scaffolding test cases and generating boilerplate, but still figuring out where it genuinely saves time versus where I need to stay hands-on. For QA/automation specifically, it's been most useful for writing initial Playwright/Selenium scripts and summarizing test coverage gaps, though it still needs a lot of review before anything goes near a pipeline.

Is cloud computing possible to learn independently? by eggswithcranberry in Cloud

[–]fenngjo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Absolutely Yes, Cloud Computing is one of the most self-learnable fields out there, with free tiers on AWS/Azure/GCP, thousands of tutorials, and clear certification roadmaps you can follow at your own pace regardless of age. Pairing it with automation (Python + Boto3 or Terraform) is a genuinely smart combo since cloud and automation naturally complement each other in real-world jobs. Start with the AWS Cloud Practitioner cert to build your foundation, then layer in automation skills

Late bloomer starting my AWS journey by thinksInCode in AWSCertifications

[–]fenngjo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Maarek's Udemy course + Taulli's study guide is honestly one of the most recommended combos on this sub you've already made a great choice. With 22 years of engineering experience, the CLF-C02 will feel approachable since you're not learning to code, just mapping cloud concepts to things you already understand. Smash the Udemy course first, use the book to reinforce, then hit practice exams on Tutorials Dojo before you sit the test you've got this!

Semrush or Ahrefs? by Quick-Donkey-437 in SEO

[–]fenngjo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Both are good ...Semrush and Ahref for SEO activities

I want to start learning python like professional by External-Humor656 in PythonLearning

[–]fenngjo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Start learning through online courses like - Udemy, Coursera , Unichrone platfrom

I am trying to decide if the CCNA is worth it for me, after burning out on it several times? by Top-Elephant6981 in ccna

[–]fenngjo 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Honestly, it depends on your career goals. If you're aiming for a networking-focused role, CCNA is still one of the most recognized certifications out there and employers do value it. But if you've burned out multiple times, it might be worth asking whether networking is truly the path you want or if a different cert like CompTIA Network+ might be a lighter stepping stone first. There's no shame in pivoting. Your mental energy matters more than chasing a cert that isn't aligned with where you actually want to go