Built for people who need actual system management skills
We started in 2016 because too many training programs taught theory without showing how things work in production environments.
Our instructors have spent years managing infrastructure at scale. They know what breaks at 3am and how to fix it before anyone notices.
From classroom confusion to confident deployment
Most courses dump documentation and expect you to figure it out. We walk through real scenarios with actual configuration files and live troubleshooting.
Students work with the same tools they'll use at work—no simplified versions or outdated setups that bear no resemblance to production systems.
What makes our approach different
Real infrastructure
Configure actual servers, not browser simulations. Break things safely and learn recovery procedures that work.
Flexible scheduling
Join group sessions or book private time with instructors. Both options cover the same material at your own pace.
Direct access
Ask questions during live sessions or reach instructors between classes. No ticket systems or waiting three days for answers.
Practical focus
Learn by doing, not memorizing. Every lesson includes hands-on work with immediate feedback on what works.
How we got here
Started with Linux administration courses
Three instructors teaching evening classes to 12 students. We focused on command-line proficiency and basic server management that employers actually needed.
Added containerization and orchestration
Docker became standard in production environments, so we built curriculum around real deployment scenarios. Students learned by migrating applications, not following tutorials.
Moved entire platform online
Built remote lab infrastructure allowing students from 40+ countries to access the same hands-on environment. Live sessions replaced in-person classes without losing interaction quality.
Introduced advanced monitoring paths
Companies needed people who could build observability into systems from the start. We developed courses covering metrics collection, log aggregation, and incident response workflows.
Running automation and security programs
Our newest tracks cover infrastructure as code and security hardening. Students write automation scripts and implement security controls they'll use in actual production work.
Who this works for
People switching from support roles who need technical depth. Junior admins trying to move beyond basic troubleshooting. Anyone stuck doing repetitive manual work who wants to automate themselves out of those tasks.
Some students join group sessions for structure and peer interaction. Others prefer one-on-one sessions where they can focus on specific gaps in their knowledge. Both paths cover the same ground—just at different speeds.