JavaScript: Getting Started 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.
Pluralsight · Web Development
JavaScript: Getting Started
Udacity · Web Development
Cloud DevOps Engineer Nanodegree
Per-criterion
JavaScript: Getting Started
Three hours and fifty-eight minutes covering environment setup, data types, operators, control flow, functions, objects and a final DOM manipulation project. The course was last updated June 28, 2025, which keeps the tooling (VS Code, npm local server) current. Capped because the course is deliberately introductory — async JavaScript, ES modules and the browser APIs that every real project needs are outside scope.
Mark Zamoyta brings 25-plus years of developer experience and a decade on Wall Street at Goldman Sachs and Lehman Brothers. Reviewers consistently praise his measured pacing and habit of explaining "why" before "how." The main criticism is that demonstration segments occasionally move faster than a first-time learner can follow without pausing.
The course is bundled inside a Pluralsight subscription — $29/month or $299/year for the Standard plan, $449/year for Premium. There is no a-la-carte purchase option. For a single four-hour beginner course, the cost-per-hour argument requires taking multiple courses within the same billing cycle to compete with Udemy's $13-16 one-time purchase model.
The final section modifies a modern, responsive web page — the closest the course gets to real-world output. The project is intentionally small but gives beginners a concrete artifact at the end. Reviewers who want to build full apps need at least two or three follow-up Pluralsight paths before they are employable.
Pluralsight does not provide instructor Q&A threads, peer forums or community cohorts at the course level. The platform offers skill assessments and learning paths as structural substitutes. Learners who need a human to answer questions during the course must go to Stack Overflow or Discord communities independently.
Cloud DevOps Engineer Nanodegree
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.