infrastructure with Anthos. So who here went through the
Google Kubernetes Engine? Amazing training. I love this training. Perfect. I just wanted to verify. So generally speaking, we have the Google Fundamentals class, we have the Architecting with Google Kubernetes Engine. This is the advanced course of Kubernetes, where we're not only looking at Kubernetes as an isolated unit inside of GKE in the Cloud, but we're actually expanding that into your on-premise in a hybrid cloud environment. That is the main idea or the main topic of this training. The audience and prerequisites. We're looking for Cloud architects, administrators, SysOps, and DevOps, and sometimes actually developers. So even though we're looking and we're talking a lot about infrastructure today, some of the modules and some of the concepts here would be mostly relevant for developers, including especially the service mesh, which is being very in which is being heavily targeting, like it's targeting developers now more than operators, which is a bit of a trend that is happening in the industry. Individuals using GCP platforms would like to manage and operate a hybrid cloud environments. We heavily rely on knowledge in Kubernetes, prerequisite knowledge, and so knowledge and GCP, in this class just as an idea, and our course objectives. So we would like to understand Anthos benefits, understand the core Anthos components, to really breakdown what Anthos is and what Anthos is not. Sometimes, that can be a blurred line, and sometimes it can be a very defined line, and we can go over all of these things together. Configured GK on-prem, where you will see how we can create a connection between your Cloud environment and your on-premise, understand service mesh. That is a very interesting topic that we will really decouple and try to get into the premise. We will install service mesh with Istio, configure centralized telemetry, configure traffic management, understand and define multi-cluster service architecture, and install the Configuration Management, which are all part of Anthos.