A concise cheat sheet describing every Google Cloud product and service in four words or less.
The Google Cloud Developer's Cheat Sheet is a community-maintained reference that provides extremely brief (four-word) descriptions of every Google Cloud product and service. It solves the problem of information overload by distilling complex cloud offerings into digestible snippets, making it easier for developers to scan, compare, and understand Google Cloud's extensive portfolio.
Cloud developers, architects, and DevOps engineers working with or evaluating Google Cloud Platform who need a quick reference to understand service purposes and capabilities.
It offers the most concise and comprehensive overview of Google Cloud services available, saving time compared to reading full documentation and providing a unique, at-a-glance perspective curated by Google's own Developer Relations Team.
The Google Cloud Developer's Cheat Sheet
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Every Google Cloud product is described in four words or less, such as 'Event-driven serverless functions' for Cloud Functions, enabling rapid comprehension without information overload.
Covers all publicly available products across domains like Compute and AI/ML, and is maintained by Google's Developer Relations Team, ensuring accuracy and timely updates as noted in the README.
Products are logically grouped by categories with linked documentation pages, making it easy to browse and compare services during architecture planning.
Offers an interactive web version and downloadable posters/wallpapers in various resolutions, catering to different usage scenarios like offline reference or training materials.
The four-word descriptions are too brief for understanding technical nuances or making informed decisions, forcing users to rely on external documentation for details.
The list only includes publicly available products and is updated via pull requests, missing pre-release features and potentially lagging behind new releases, as admitted in the README.
The GitHub repository lacks built-in search, filtering, or interactive querying, requiring users to scroll through the entire README to find specific services.