Go & Vanilla JS: Fullstack Without Frameworks vs Complete Intro to Containers (feat. Docker)
Same Bayesian formula, same rubric — so the difference in scores reflects the difference in the courses, not the difference in how we evaluated them.
Frontend Masters · Web Development
Go & Vanilla JS: Fullstack Without Frameworks
Frontend Masters · Web Development
Complete Intro to Containers (feat. Docker)
Per-criterion
Ten hours eleven minutes covering the full stack end-to-end: Go project setup and architecture, a JSON REST API with structured handlers, Postgres integration via a repository interface pattern, Vanilla JS web components, a client-side SPA router built from scratch, View Transitions API, search/filter/sort, and a complete JWT authentication flow covering registration, login, server-side middleware, and client-side route guards. Published May 27, 2025 — compatible with Go 1.22+ and modern browser APIs. The course deliberately avoids backend frameworks (no Gin, Echo, or Fiber), relying on Go's standard library, keeping outcomes transferable to any Go project.
Maximiliano Firtman is a prolific Frontend Masters instructor with prior courses on Mobile Web Development, Progressive Web Apps, and JavaScript Performance. The course holds a 4.9/5 star platform rating — among the highest for full-stack courses on Frontend Masters. Students consistently cite his habit of explaining architectural decisions and trade-offs rather than simply typing out code, and his willingness to debug real issues live during recording rather than presenting pre-cleaned output. Reviewers describe him as a "true master" whose teaching style emphasises the reasoning behind every decision.
Access requires a Frontend Masters subscription (~$39/month or ~$390/year for individuals) rather than a one-time purchase. Strong value for learners using the broader catalog — Frontend Masters covers JavaScript, TypeScript, React, CSS, Node.js, and dozens of related tracks under one subscription. Weaker for those taking only this course. No free tier beyond a short preview. The subscription cost is the dominant frustration across otherwise positive reviews, consistent with complaints across the entire Frontend Masters catalog.
The course builds a complete movie catalogue application end-to-end: a Go REST API with structured JSON handlers, a Postgres layer using a repository interface pattern, AIR-powered live-reload during development, full JWT authentication (registration, login, server-side middleware, golang-jwt token generation), and a Vanilla JS SPA with a hand-rolled client-side router, View Transitions, web components for every UI element, a search/filter/sort feature, and authenticated user pages (My Account, Favorites, Watchlist). Full authentication including client-side route guards distinguishes this course from most full-stack offerings that leave auth as an exercise or third-party library call.
The deliberate no-framework approach teaches patterns that transfer to any technology choice: the router is built from scratch, web components replace UI libraries, state management uses the Proxy pattern. Students report that this improves their ability to evaluate frameworks critically, because they understand what each framework is solving. Go's standard library — net/http, database/sql, log/slog — maps directly to production Go codebases. The Postgres repository pattern, AIR for live-reload, and Postman-tested API routes represent practices encountered in real engineering teams.
The course stands apart from typical Docker tutorials by opening with a module called "Crafting Containers by Hand," where students manually implement chroot, Linux namespaces, and cgroups before Docker is introduced. This first-principles approach is the most-cited reason learners say the course made containers finally click, rather than just memorising Dockerfile syntax. The curriculum then progresses through Docker images, Dockerfiles, Node.js containerisation, layer caching strategies, Alpine Linux for smaller images, multi-stage builds, distroless containers, static asset optimisation, bind mounts, volumes, dev containers, Docker networking, Docker Compose, and a practical introduction to Kubernetes and Kompose. The open-source companion notes at btholt.github.io/complete-intro-to-containers are freely available under a Creative Commons licence, which allows learners to revisit content without re-watching videos. The course does cover the original version's content well; a v2 update on Frontend Masters addresses cgroups v2 changes and dependency freshness, so learners should verify which version they are accessing. Minor critiques include the relative brevity of the Kubernetes module, which is treated as a brief orientation rather than a deep dive, and the Node.js-heavy examples, which assume JavaScript familiarity even though the container concepts themselves are language-agnostic.
Brian Holt brings over a decade of engineering and product management experience across Netflix, LinkedIn, Reddit, Microsoft (VS Code team), Stripe, Snowflake/Streamlit, and Databricks, giving him genuine production-grade context for every concept he teaches. On Frontend Masters, he has authored more than a dozen "Complete Intro" courses, making him one of the platform's highest-volume and most-reviewed instructors. Learner feedback consistently uses the same descriptors across multiple courses and years: "excellent," "clear," "fun," "great teacher." His containers course specifically is praised for making systems-level Linux concepts approachable to web developers who have never opened a man page. Holt openly acknowledges when a topic is dense — he describes the course as "pretty dense with a lot of systems-level stuff thrown at you in a short time" — but frames each piece incrementally so the cognitive load stays manageable. His tendency to explain the why behind each tool (why cgroups exist, why Alpine saves hundreds of megabytes, why distroless containers matter in CI/CD pipelines) is cited by multiple reviewers as what separates this from documentation-style instruction. The only consistent criticism is that his pace can feel quick for learners coming from a pure frontend background with no prior Linux exposure, and those learners are advised to take his Complete Intro to Linux and the Command-Line first.
Access to the course requires a Frontend Masters subscription, priced at $39 per month or $390 per year (effectively $32.50 per month). The subscription model is the most common source of neutral and negative sentiment across the 38 opinions analysed, as it compares unfavourably to a one-time Udemy purchase for learners who only want a single course. The value calculation improves significantly if the learner is already subscribed for other Frontend Masters content or plans to take additional courses in the same month. Within that framing, reviewers consistently describe the subscription as worthwhile given the breadth and depth of the catalog. The course notes for Complete Intro to Containers are freely published on GitHub and btholt.github.io under a Creative Commons licence, which Holt explicitly designed so that financial barriers do not block access to the curriculum. Learners on a tight budget can follow the full written curriculum for free, losing only the video walkthroughs. Several blog posts note that this free-access policy, combined with the open-source code examples, makes the course more transparent than most paid offerings at a similar price point.
Rather than a single end-to-end application, the course uses a progression of hands-on exercises that directly reinforce each module. Students begin by creating a containerised environment entirely from Linux primitives — chroot, unshare, cgroups — using command-line tools directly in the terminal. Subsequent exercises containerise a real Node.js application, iterating through progressively optimised Dockerfiles: first a basic image, then one with explicit layer ordering for faster rebuilds, then an Alpine-based version that is roughly 80% smaller than the Debian default, then a multi-stage build, then a distroless variant. The Docker Compose module adds a MongoDB service alongside the Node app, creating a practical multi-container scenario that mirrors real development setups. Pre-built Docker images are provided so that slow internet connections do not block workshop progress. Reviewers note the exercises feel production-relevant rather than toy examples, and the GitHub repository (945 stars, 181 forks) demonstrates ongoing community use. The Kubernetes exercises are more abbreviated — primarily using Kompose to convert a Compose file — and learners who want deep Kubernetes practice will need a dedicated course afterwards.
Container knowledge has become a baseline expectation for full-stack and backend developers at most organisations that deploy to the cloud, and this course maps directly to the most common production patterns: writing Dockerfiles for Node.js services, reducing image sizes for faster CI/CD pipelines, using multi-stage builds to separate build and runtime environments, structuring multi-service applications with Docker Compose, and understanding how Kubernetes orchestrates containers at scale. The dev containers module is particularly relevant to modern team workflows, covering how to use containers to create reproducible development environments that eliminate "works on my machine" problems. Holt draws on his experience across Netflix, Reddit, and cloud infrastructure roles at Stripe and Databricks to ground each concept in how it is actually used in production. Multiple blog post reviewers describe going directly from the course to containerising services at work. The Kubernetes coverage is acknowledged as introductory rather than comprehensive, and learners moving into DevOps or platform engineering roles will need further study. For web developers adding Docker competency to an existing JavaScript skill set, however, this is the most practically oriented course in the Frontend Masters catalog.
Scoring methodology applies identically to every course on the site — see the formula.