>if you have insufficient funds they'll take out a margin loan
That's not my experience with them. I've had them as a checking/brokerage account for 10+ years. I tend not to keep much money in checking so I run into timing issues once a year or so - where a check I wrote will present before the funds to cover it arrive in my account. I've definitely had them pull from the brokerage cash, but not from savings. They have never opened a margin loan to cover it.
Also not my experience. Accidentally had a timing issue once, and was overdrawn for a week before an ACH more than covered the difference.
On day four they called me to make sure I was aware. I explained that I had already started a transfer several days earlier, and they said "no problem" and thanked me for being a customer.
No overdraft fees, no pulling from my brokerage account, no margin loan. Never heard anything about it ever again.
It's happened to me a couple times as I don't keep cash in my brokerage account. To cover the checking account, they'll pull from the brokerage account, and if there's insufficient cash in the brokerage account, they take a margin loan. vOv
Yes and no. NACLs are, indeed, associated with a subnet so more of a networking construct. It's somewhat a firewall, but it's also stateless which is different than many (non-network engineer) people's mental model of a firewall.
Security Groups have some key differences from a host-based firewall. A packet destined for an EC2 instance will not make it to the instance IP stack and be evaluated there, it will be evaluated before it gets there.
It depends on your audience. A web dev that's relatively new to syadmin tasks... sure, it's like a host based firewall. For a syadmin or network admin, that explanation might be more confusing than helpful.
I found the Associate level good for directed learning. I learned about some facets of services I hadn't been aware of and gained exposure to services I hadn't used for projects to date. It was my first cert in ~20 years of IT (sysadmin and dev), FWIW.
I've heard, as another poster pointed out, that the Professional level certs are well regarded. Associate, eh.
No one ever comes out and says "You were hired on the basis of a cert". It's just another factor. If you've got the experience they're probably not worth as much. If you don't, they'll help.
SysAdmin, been doing web dev (Java) for the last couple of years. Looking to get back to the Ops side of things. MBA and AWS Solutions Architect Associate.
"It let's your viewers find" should be "It lets", on the Why page.
Note that in that section, out of the four sentences, three end in an exclamation mark. IMO this does make the copy feel a bit... shouty / cheap; I don't imagine the Apple site, for example, would ever do this).
I'd also start that section again with the name (i.e. "Sunsed lets your viewers", rather than a pronoun (it). Readers often skip sections, plus excessive use of "it" is perhaps a bit de-personalising of the product.
That's not my experience with them. I've had them as a checking/brokerage account for 10+ years. I tend not to keep much money in checking so I run into timing issues once a year or so - where a check I wrote will present before the funds to cover it arrive in my account. I've definitely had them pull from the brokerage cash, but not from savings. They have never opened a margin loan to cover it.