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Archive for the ‘Microsoft Windows Azure’ Category

Microsoft Azure Outage in Europe on Thursday July 26th 2012 11:09am GMT

Friday, July 27th, 2012

The Microsoft Windows Azure cloud compute service was unavailable to many users in Europe for 2.5 hours on Thursday, starting at 11:09 a.m. Greenwich Mean Time. The cloud compute service in the West Europe region is provided by Azure servers in Microsoft’s Dublin, Ireland, data center and in an Amsterdam facility.

Azure storage services continued to be available and running workloads stayed up, regardless of whether users could access them or not, making the cause of loss of availability a different case from the Feb. 29 outage where a security certificate entered Azure’s infrastructure without the ability to recognize it was a unique leap year date.

Microsoft slashes Office 365 prices by 20% (20 percent)

Thursday, March 15th, 2012

This is a great news for everyone who is using Microsoft Office 365, the price of the Microsoft cloud services are dropping! Microsoft has slashes the prices for the Enterprise Suite of Microsoft Office 365.

 

The E1 plan which was $10 per user per month is now $8 per user; the E3 plan which was $24 per user and now is $20 per user.  

 

Microsoft attributed this price reduction to the cost efficiencies of having more customers on Microsoft Office 365 resulting in lower costs to run the cloud system and thus they are passing the savings onto the business customers.  The reduced prices take effect immediately for new and renewing customers. This is great news and it shows that Cloud computing works and that adding capacity and customers results in cost drops while increasing services offered, as Microsoft has been continuing to improve and add new features to the Office 365 stack.

 

You can read more about the announcement at Microsoft Office 365 Blog.

 

Microsoft  is also talking about the A2 plan being free for students and teachers and faculty in the Education space!

 

ISHIR is the go to partner with Microsoft to promote and evangelize the adoption of Microsoft Cloud Computing services (Office 365 and Microsoft Azure).  ISHIR provides Cloud Assessment and Readiness services to help you chart your path to the cloud.

Don’t Hate Us Because We are a Microsoft Partner

Tuesday, November 29th, 2011

It feels like 20 years ago all over again when I used to read about Microsoft antitrust hearings in the newspaper. The recent news is that Microsoft is the most despised software company. This is according to research from Amplicate, a company that tracks what people say online. We were skeptical so we Binged the company and it seems legit. Then to be fair I used Google and got similar results. ;)

Amplicate gives Microsoft a “70 percent hate score,” meaning that the large majority of people that have posted on its Web site have bad things to say about the cost and stability of Microsoft Software and tools. Microsoft also received more comments (good and bad) than any other software vendor on Amplicate’s list.
We have an explanation: First, Microsoft is not perfect and does not produce the perfectly bug free products. We fight its software all too often being a Microsoft Gold Partner ourselves. Microsoft is both a target for hackers (because it is so ubiquitous) and a punching bag for millions of customers that depend on Windows, Office, etc.

By the way, Oracle claimed a 78 percent level of hate. Ouch Larry, you aren’t any better.

 

Read about our Microsoft Gold partnership

Microsoft COO Turner bashes competitors in WPC keynote

Thursday, July 14th, 2011

 

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For his annual keynote at the Microsoft Wordwide Partner Conference, taking place this week in Los Angeles, Microsoft Chief Operating Officer Kevin Turner wasted little time challenging Microsoft’s many competitors. He flouted the supposed weaknesses of Cisco, IBM, Google, Oracle and others, letting attendees know that Microsoft is gunning for these companies’ business.

“I am grateful for those competitors. It is fun going after them in a big way,” he said.

Turner even took the opportunity to criticize some of Microsoft’s old technologies, such as Windows XP and Office 2003.

As the COO, Turner oversees Microsoft’s worldwide sales, marketing, and services. And at the WPC conference, his role is to rally Microsoft partners to march into battle against competing companies. This year, however, Turner seemed even more eager than usual to call out competitors by name and list their putative deficiencies.

Google was one of the first companies Turner savaged, particularly in regards to its online office suite, Google Docs. “Two years ago, all of the headlines said Microsoft was in big trouble,” he said. “Guess what? It hasn’t happened.”

He criticized Google for hidden fees in Google Docs, which Microsoft competes against with its own recently launched Office365. Turner claimed that Google’s annual fee of $50 per user per year is “only the tip of the iceberg.” Customers may incur additional fees, the nature of which Turner did not specify.

He also touted Office365, taking the time to quote an article from a trade magazine, stating that “Office 365, frankly, is to Google Apps as XBOX 360 Live is to Pong.”

“Office365, ladies and gentlemen, is nothing but a Google butt-kicker,” he said, adding that Office365 had already gained 5 million licensed users. He also mocked Google Talk as an “inferior messaging system.”

Discussing Cisco, Turner extolled the audience to go after that company’s profitable teleconference business. “Think about all the years that Cisco has been milking those high margins — 75, 80 percent margins — on its unified communications product,” he said, adding that Microsoft’s partners could offer a lower-cost alternative through Microsoft’s Lync unified communications offering.

Another target was IBM. Turner notes that Microsoft has migrated 4.5 million users off of IBM’s Lotus Notes, and expects to migrate another 5 million this year, all in favor of Microsoft Exchange.

Taking aim at Oracle, Tuner rhetorically asked: “How many happy Oracle customers are you talking to?”

“There is a tremendous opportunity for us to really go after the Oracle customer right now,” he said. He posited that SQL Server was a lower-cost and more secure alternative to the Oracle database.

With VMware, he referred to something he called the “VMware tax,” noting that Microsoft’s Hyper-V virtualization software offers the ability to run more virtual machines, after the first six, at no additional cost. “We caught VMware flat-footed because of the economics of the cloud,” he said. “The more VMs you add, the more you save.”

This is not the first year that Turner has bashed competitors. Last year at WPC, Turner mocked Apple for its problems with the then recently released iPhone 4, calling it Apple’s Vista, referring to Microsoft’s own less-than-enthusiastically received operating system.

Apple was not spared Turner ‘s mockery this year either. Comparing Apple’s approach to its operating systems with Microsoft’s, Turned mused that “your guess is as good as mine as to when [Apple will merge] the iOS and MacOS.” Windows 8, in contrast, will be a single OS that will bridge a wide range of different devices, he noted.

Turner also took apparent delight in displaying photos of an unnamed authorized Apple reseller store in Latin America that was selling Apple desktops and Apple laptops running Windows 7. “That should tell you a lot about having a great OS.”

Some of Turner’s jibes were more enthusiastic than coherent. “It is so good to have something to compete with Salesforce.com head-to-head,” Turner trumpeted, referring to Microsoft’s Dynamics CRM Online, which has gone live in direct competition with Salesforce.com’s offerings. “Now, we have this humongous pacifier to stick in the mouth of [Salesforce.com CEO] Marc Benioff.”

Not all of Turner’s talk was bluster. He also took the opportunity to provide a eulogy for Microsoft products that the company hopes its users will upgrade, namely Windows XP, Office 2003 and Internet Explorer 6. “Those products deserve a standing ovation. They have been so good to so many people. But you know what? They are dead. End-of-life is 2014,” Turner said.

These widely used products define what Microsoft is for far too many people, he added. “The reality is that is not what we are at all. You can’t even begin to get someone’s mind around Lync and SharePoint and the cloud until we get these old applications remediated and moved forward,” he said.

Turner also outlined the strategy partners should take to help get their customers onto the Microsoft Azure cloud. Microsoft’s Azure service has already collected 40,000 customers across 41 countries, although this is a small percentage of the customers Microsoft would like to have using this service. He explained that the two vital pieces of software that every organizations should have to get cloud ready is Microsoft System Center and Microsoft Active Directory.

“When they want they want to go to the cloud, these two assets will make that possible,” he said. “If they are not quite ready to go to cloud, it doesn’t matter. We’ll take them when they are ready.”

Microsoft and Intuit become cloud partners

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Microsoft and Intuit today announced plans to integrate their two cloud platforms – the Intuit Partner Platform and the Windows Azure platform – to power developers to create apps for users of the Quickbooks software. In addition, Intuit will place Microsoft’s cloud-based productivity apps in the Intuit App Center for small businesses.

The deal is non-exclusive but Intuit is naming Windows Azure as its preferred partner and is making the Azure software development kit available for developers creating apps on the Intuit Partner Platform.

The idea, of course, is to link Microsoft’s business applications to the financial data that’s found within Quickbooks to help businesses operate more efficiently. For months, Intuit has been working to push the cloud and open its arms to developers.

In July, Intuit launched an open-source community where users could share information to enhance the apps on Intuit’s platform. Prior to that, the company announced Federated Applications, which allows developers to use any programming language, host those apps on any cloud infrastructure and connect them to Intuit’s platform, marketing them to business customers who use Intuit products.

Microsoft unveils Windows Azure platform

Thursday, December 3rd, 2009

Microsoft has announced the availability of Windows Azure platform and has also unveiled a set of new Windows Azure features, Windows Server capabilities, marketplace offerings and Pinpoint, an online marketplace for its partners to market and sell their applications.

The company introduced a new information service codenamed ‘Dallas’, available through Pinpoint and built on the Windows Azure platform that enables developers and users to access commercial and reference datasets and content on any platform.

Microsoft is also offering Windows Server AppFabric Beta 1, a set of integrated, application services that enable developers to deploy and manage applications spanning both server and cloud.

According to Microsoft, the AppFabric technology combines hosting and caching technologies with the Windows Azure platform AppFabric Service Bus and AppFabric Access Control. Together, these technologies offer a set of application services to enhance both Windows Server and Windows Azure with a common foundation for running .NET applications.

The company also plans to offer Windows Server virtual machine support on Windows Azure, to enable customers to support virtualised infrastructure across the continuum of on-premises and cloud computing, and the release to manufacturing of Windows Identity Foundation, to help developers provide simplified user access to both cloud and on-premises applications with open, identity-based claims.

In addition, it has also released ASP.NET MVC2 beta, a free supported framework that enables developers to build standards-based web applications through asynchronous JavaScript and XML (AJAX) integration.

What is Microsoft Windows Azure?

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

The launch of Windows Azure has coincided with the launch of the entire cloud computing initiative from Microsoft, marks the traditional software giant’s biggest move into the Internet cloud and into the software-as-a-service business model.

Azure ties Microsoft’s existing software development tools into a platform for deploying applications in the cloud, competing with Amazon Web Services, Google App Engine and others. Given all the discussion of whether businesses can depend on the cloud, one of Azure’s big selling points will probably be its touted reliability. Microsoft says that Azure builds the management into the platform and the applications themselves.

The Windows Azure Fabric provides an Internet-scale hosting environment that lives on Microsoft’s data centers. The hosting environment provides a runtime execution environment for managed code, and might in the future include support for native code. The fabric handles load balancing and resource management and automatically manages the life cycle of a service based on requirements established by the owner of the service. The developer specifies the service topology, the number of instances to deploy, and any other necessary configuration settings. The fabric deploys the service and manages upgrades and failures.

A Windows Azure service is built from one or more roles which define a component to run in the execution environment; within the fabric, a service may run one or more instances of a role. This is the base platform that provides a generic cloud computing platform for developers to host applications on.  Currently there are two types of compute services that can be deployed on Azure:

* Web Role: This currently is a WebForms ASP.Net application or another words  its a web application accessible via an HTTP and/or an HTTPS endpoint. A web role is hosted in an environment designed to support a subset of ASP.NET and Windows Communication Foundation technologies.

* Worker Role: A worker role is a background processing service. This is more like a Windows Service that is deployed on the cloud. A worker role may communicate with storage services and with other Internet-based services. It does not expose any external endpoints. A worker role can read requests from a queue defined in the Queue storage service. It can make outgoing connections but incoming connections are disallowed. But again you get the benefits of load balancing and failover.

Why Azure Services?

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

With Azure services, you can offer your customers more choices. Enable them to hand off the management of several types of applications —including consumer-oriented Web applications, enterprise-oriented data integration, and compute-intensive analysis —to Microsoft data centers. Users, developers, and operators don’t have to concern themselves with the physical location of the servers, the data, or the application logic. Cloud computing makes everything available through the network.

You can develop customized solutions that leverage Windows Azure and SQL Azure together with Microsoft .NET Services, Microsoft Office Live Services, Windows SharePoint Services, and Microsoft Dynamics CRM Services. And make the most of new business opportunities, like:

Extending existing investments. As you evolve your applications, you can use Azure services to expand the capabilities of your existing on-premises or Web-based offerings.

Reaching new customers. Usage-based pricing and cloud-based deployment mean lower entry costs for both you and your customers —enabling you to develop innovative applications and access new markets with less risk.

Reducing costs. Simplified deployments and reduced dependencies on hardware enable you to focus on higher-margin and higher-value services.

Looking to get your existing application migrated to Microsoft Azure