Mastering Openstack(Instructor led training)

About Course
OpenStack, a cloud operating system, controls large pools of computing, storage, and networking resources throughout a datacenter, all managed through a dashboard. OpenStack is free and open-source, but if you are going for a vendor-specific version, it might cost you. This revolutionary platform addresses the need of organizations to have flexible and automated resource provisioning and orchestration devices. OpenStack aims to promote open source cloud platforms which are believed to be the future of Cloud Computing.
As the market share for OpenStack keeps increasing (expected to reach 5.38 billion U.S dollars by 2020) and because of the huge benefits it offers businesses, the demand for OpenStack qualified engineers and developers is hitting the roof. OpenStack provides an attractive solution for end-users who seek to build an inexpensive cloud and for system vendors looking to transition to a services model. OpenStack is well supported in the industry, and has also grown dramatically in scope.
Unless you’ve been living in another dimension, you know that OpenStack has grown to be one of the most popular cloud computing platforms, and that it’s not going anywhere anytime soon.
Same as with any popular technology, businesses are investing in OpenStack because it allows them to do so many otherwise unattainable things.
The importance of OpenStack lies in its flexibility, scalability, and adaptability. Plus, by being an open-source platform, it helps businesses minimize their infrastructure costs, and what’s something they constantly look for other than reducing costs?
All in all, OpenStack helps improve business agility, increases the efficiency of crucial processes, and makes resources more available.
All that being said, you’re right to think that businesses who want to stay relevant (I mean, what kind of business doesn’t?) will want to embrace this technology. Or, more precisely, they will NEED to.
And you, if you want to keep your skills relevant (I mean, why would you not?), you’ll want to have the expertise and the practical experience needed to work with OpenStack.