We are proud to announce our partnership with Cloudflare, a leading player in web performance and security.

With its extensive network of data centres serving millions of websites, Cloudflare has become a key component of the architecture that powers the web. Lately, they have introduced a suite of AI building blocks to their stack, enabling developers to easily deploy AI apps, utilise open-source models, accessing a vector database, get LLM analytics, set rate limits, and much more.

In this partnership, Scrimba and Cloudflare will use these building blocks to ensure that the next generation of web applications are built in a secure, performant, and intelligent way.

“We have been using Cloudflare to improve Scrimba’s performance and security for years. They are the best in the industry in our view, so we are really proud to enter into this partnership”, says Per Borgen, CEO of Scrimba.

Introducing a brand new AI deployment course

The first step of the partnership is the creation of a course on how to deploy robust AI apps to the edge. Recorded by Scrimba's renowned instructor Guil Hernandez, the course has already been released, meaning you can enroll in it for free here.

In true Scrimba fashion, the course evolves around a real-world project and solving coding challenges along the way.

It also serves as the deployment module for Scrimba's AI Engineer Path, which helps web developers transition into AI engineers, one of the most sought-after technical roles these days.

Ricky Robinett, VP Developer Relations and Community at Cloudflare, explains why they are excited about the partnership.

“Scrimba is the gold standard of interactive learning, so we're very happy to finally see a Cloudflare course on the platform" says Ricky Robinett.

Another part of the collaboration involves enriching Cloudflare's documentation with interactive scrims. These guides will cater to developers who prefer watching audiovisual tutorials and experimenting on their own over reading textual documentation.

“The Cloudflare docs should be approachable regardless of how you like to learn, whether it's through reading textual guides or watching interactive scrims”, says Robinett.