Cloud infrastructure
taught by people
who've broken things
in production
"Managing a server isn't glamorous. Getting it right is."
What shapes
how we teach
Specificity over abstraction
Every module covers a concrete scenario — configuring Nginx, handling SSH key rotation, diagnosing load spikes. Participants work on realistic setups, not simplified toy examples.
Convenient access, no commute required
Online access was a deliberate design choice from day one. Students in Rivne and surrounding areas get the same session quality without arranging transport around a fixed classroom schedule.
Honest progression expectations
Getting comfortable with cloud infrastructure takes weeks, not hours. Courses are structured to reflect that — each session builds directly on the previous one rather than pretending complexity can be skipped.
Who runs these sessions and why it matters
Instructors who teach cloud management should have spent real time inside it.
Vorskalem sessions are led by practitioners with direct experience managing production environments — not slides built from documentation. That distinction affects how problems get explained and which edge cases get mentioned.