A curated list of resources about serverless computing and serverless architectures.
Awesome Serverless is a curated GitHub repository listing resources related to serverless computing and serverless architectures. It aggregates blogs, talks, projects, tools, and educational materials to help developers learn and build with serverless technologies. The project is part of the "awesome list" series, focusing on high-quality, community-vetted content.
Developers, architects, and DevOps engineers exploring or working with serverless technologies who want a centralized reference for learning materials, tools, and community resources.
It saves time by filtering and organizing the vast serverless ecosystem into a single, maintained list, ensuring users access reputable and up-to-date resources without scouring the internet.
DEPRECATED: Curated list of resources related to serverless computing and serverless architectures.
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Organizes a wide range of serverless materials into categories like blogs, talks, and projects, as detailed in the README's table of contents from General to Professional Services.
Follows the 'awesome list' standard with an Awesome badge, ensuring resources are high-quality and community-approved, as noted in the philosophy section.
Includes literature, courses, and workshops such as Udemy courses and books listed in the Literature/Education section, aiding structured learning.
Lists serverless frameworks and plugins, e.g., the Serverless Framework Plugins section with specific entries like canary deployments and local environment plugins.
As a static GitHub repository, it may not be updated frequently, risking outdated links or missed new resources, with no automated update mechanism mentioned in the README.
Provides links without evaluative content, such as comparisons or pros/cons, which users might need for informed decisions, as seen in the straightforward listing of resources.
No built-in features for user ratings, comments, or feedback, reducing engagement and real-time community input, since it's primarily a markdown file.