CourseVerdict

HTML, CSS, and Javascript for Web Developers vs Cloud DevOps Engineer Nanodegree

Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.

Johns Hopkins University (Coursera) · Web Development

HTML, CSS, and Javascript for Web Developers

3.9/ 5 · 32 opinions
21 positive5 neutral6 negative/ 32 total

Udacity · Web Development

Cloud DevOps Engineer Nanodegree

3.4/ 5 · 28 opinions
11 positive9 neutral8 negative/ 28 total

Per-criterion

Content quality3.7 / 5

Genuinely rigorous on fundamentals — the CSS box model, positioning, the float-based layout era and JavaScript objects are taught with unusual depth for a free-to-audit course. The recurring drag is age: the front-end project leans on Bootstrap 3 (2013), and CSS Grid, Flexbox and modern JavaScript syntax barely appear, which reviewers flag constantly.

Instructor4.2 / 5

Yaakov Chaikin is the standout. Reviewers across every sample describe him as clear, rigorous and genuinely good at making mechanisms click rather than hand-waving them. The minority complaint is that he "walks you through steps" without always stopping to explain why, which leaves a thin slice of beginners feeling lost when an assignment diverges.

Value for money4.3 / 5

A university-branded front-end course you can audit for free, or take for the Coursera certificate at ~$49/month with a 7-day trial — most learners finish a single course in 4-6 weeks. For the depth of the HTML/CSS/JS fundamentals delivered, the price-to-content ratio is one of the strongest in this niche.

Projects3.8 / 5

The capstone is a real, responsive restaurant/coffee-shop website built from scratch and deployed — a tangible portfolio artefact, and the most-praised structural element of the course. It loses points only because the project is built on Bootstrap 3, so the layout techniques you practise are no longer the current way the industry builds responsive sites.

Real-world use3.4 / 5

The HTML, CSS and JavaScript fundamentals transfer directly and will outlast any framework. But the specific tooling — Bootstrap 3 grid, float layouts, XMLHttpRequest-style Ajax — is dated enough that learners must pair the course with a modern Flexbox/Grid and ES6 follow-up before the skills map cleanly onto 2026 front-end work.

Content quality3.5 / 5

Curriculum covers CloudFormation, Jenkins CI/CD, Ansible, Docker and Kubernetes/EKS. Breadth is right for DevOps onboarding, but reviewers flag post-2018 Udacity content as weaker than original cohorts and shallow on production-grade IaC practice.

Instructor3.6 / 5

Multi-author program with no single pedagogical voice, mixing video, slides and AWS console walkthroughs. Lessons are clear, but reviewers note the lack of a flagship instructor and a teaching style leaning on console demos over first-principles infrastructure thinking.

Value for money2.9 / 5

The biggest drag on the score. At ~$249-399/month or $1,000-1,500 total, the program competes with the free Cloud Resume Challenge, free AWS Skill Builder, free whitepapers and re:Invent videos — and reviewers question paying ten times that for similar ground.

Projects3.5 / 5

Five projects culminating in a Kubernetes/EKS microservices deployment is the program's strongest engineering payoff. The downside is heavy boilerplate and AWS-console-driven workflow that reviewers describe as "fill in the blanks" rather than IaC from scratch.

Real-world use3.7 / 5

The tool stack — CloudFormation, Jenkins, Ansible, Docker, Kubernetes, EKS — matches what cloud-infrastructure teams actually use, and reviewers report meaningful skill transfer. The gap is that DevOps hiring requires AWS certs or a public portfolio, not a nanodegree certificate.

Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.