Docker Exclusive — Stephen Grider
He introduces Kubernetes by creating a "death scenario." He manually starts five Docker containers, then kills one. The developer is forced to restart it manually. "This is boring," Grider says. "This is why we need a manager." He then introduces Pods, Deployments, and Services not as abstract Google concepts, but as automated solutions to the specific manual labor the student just performed.
Only after the student is sufficiently frustrated does he introduce the container. This pedagogical trick—teaching the problem before the solution—is Grider’s signature. It rewires the developer’s brain to see Docker not as an abstract technology to memorize, but as a logical, necessary tool to eliminate suffering. Grider’s background is in full-stack development, but his true mastery is in visual communication. Technical documentation is notoriously dense, but Grider fights back with a whiteboard (or rather, a digital diagramming tool). stephen grider docker
For visual learners (which constitutes the majority of the population), this is a godsend. Where the official Docker docs feel like a legal text, Grider’s lectures feel like a detective explaining a crime scene. He doesn’t just tell you to map a port; he draws the request traveling from your browser, through the host machine, into the container’s virtual network, and landing on the application’s listening socket. A common criticism on Reddit and Hacker News is that Grider’s courses are too long. The Docker course clocks in at over 22 hours. Critics argue he belabors points and repeats commands ad nauseam. He introduces Kubernetes by creating a "death scenario
But for the target audience—mid-level developers transitioning into senior roles—this repetition is the feature, not the bug. Docker is unforgiving. A single misplaced COPY instruction in a Dockerfile can lead to a 2GB image and a 10-minute build time. Grider’s repetition drills the layer caching system into the student's muscle memory. "This is why we need a manager