The Ultimate Hands-On Hadoop
Tame your Big Data!

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Below are the top discussions from Reddit that mention this online Udemy course.

Hadoop tutorial with MapReduce, HDFS, Spark, Flink, Hive, HBase, MongoDB, Cassandra, Kafka + more

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Taught by
Sundog Education by Frank Kane

2

Reddit Posts and Comments

0 posts • 2 mentions • top 2 shown below

r/dataengineering • comment
3 points • MrPenguin710

Be Mindful of West Coast Prices, $2000-$2400/month for 1 Bedroom Apt in SF

I think you have plenty of experience, I wouldn't sweat it

Just keep applying and you fill find something with that background 100% Guaranteed

Life is too short to be worrying about working for someone else, and building up their company... the job will come if you keep applying and want to code and be a DE/ Big Data Developer

Look up this Big Data Course on Udemy from Sundog - Frank Kane

https://www.udemy.com/course/the-ultimate-hands-on-hadoop-tame-your-big-data/

r/datascience • comment
1 points • PM_Me_Food_stuffs

Cloudera is another company that offers the Hadoop ecosystem, you can think of it as an alternative distributor to Hortonworks. You can think of a cluster as a group of machines or servers that provide a file storage system suitable for "big data".

I found this course to be very helpful (my company has a paid udemy sub): https://www.udemy.com/course/the-ultimate-hands-on-hadoop-tame-your-big-data/

SQL using hive may work depending on the format of the data being stored in Cloudera clusters, but you might have to read up on Spark to perform data manipulation and analysis. Luckily spark can be done in python, but is better suited for scala and java.