A collection of AWS training demos, labs, and code examples maintained by AWS Technical Trainers.
aws-training-demo is a repository containing demonstration code, labs, and examples created by AWS Technical Trainers. It provides practical materials that complement official AWS training courses, helping learners understand AWS services through hands-on implementations. The repository includes demos for courses like Architecting on AWS, service-specific examples for Lambda and CloudTrail, and self-paced lab environments.
AWS learners, technical trainers, developers studying for AWS certifications, and anyone seeking practical examples to supplement AWS training materials.
Provides authentic, trainer-created examples that directly align with official AWS curriculum, offering production-relevant code that bridges theoretical knowledge with practical implementation.
AWS Technical Trainers Demos
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Demos are directly linked to official AWS courses like Architecting on AWS and Developing on AWS, ensuring relevance to certification paths as noted in the README.
Includes practical code for specific AWS services, such as the Lambda-CloudTrail integration demo from a blog post, providing real-world use cases.
Offers self-paced labs like SPL49 for deploying a Java EE application on AWS Elastic Beanstalk using Docker, giving learners ready-to-use setups.
Features Dalek for deleting all AWS account resources, useful for managing lab environments, though the README warns to use it with extreme caution.
The repository has a copyright from 2015, and some demos, like the Lambda-CloudTrail example, may not reflect current AWS services or best practices.
Focuses on a few specific courses and services (e.g., Lambda, CloudTrail), missing examples for many modern AWS offerings, as shown in the README's limited listings.
Includes Dalek, which can delete all AWS account resources and poses a significant risk if misused, as cautioned in the README.