Archive for the ‘Cloud Hosting’ Category

Azure Cloud Server Appeals To VARs

Saturday, July 17th, 2010

Microsoft announced the Windows Azure cloud computing appliance at this week’s Worldwide Partner Conference (WPC) in Washington, D.C. The first iteration of Azure in a box, as some are now calling the appliance, is meant for large companies that aren’t comfortable putting data in a public cloud. But it will be more useful to VARs once it’s scaled down for small and medium-sized businesses (SMBs).

“Over time, we will make it both bigger and smaller,” Bob Muglia, president of Microsoft’s server and tools business, said at the WPC. Microsoft says that there are currently 10,000 customers using Azure, according to SearchITChannel.com. Microsoft did not give details on pricing or a release date for the Azure cloud computing appliance at the WPC.

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Amazon.com’s High-End Computing

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Amazon.com’s Cluster Compute Quadruple Extra Large is a 64-bit platform with 23GB of memory, 1,690GB of instance storage, and 10Gbps of Ethernet I/O performance composed of 33.5 Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) compute units. The default usage limit for the Cluster Compute instance type is eight instances, or 64 cores, although customers can request more, the company says.

Full Amazon Cloud Hosting Story

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Microsoft’s Azure Now in Rackspace

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Cloud Hosting  giant Rackspace could be among the first to deliver private versions of Microsoft’s Azure cloud, free of Redmond’s control.  Rackspace CTO  John Engates said: “I think it’s a great idea to allow private versions of Azure because realistically, Microsoft can’t run all the world’s IT in its own data centers.” He added: “If and when we get strong demand for Azure in our datacenter, we’ll certainly consider offering it.”

Microsoft earlier this week announced the Windows Azure Platform Appliance containing Windows Azure compute and SQL Azure storage. The service provider believes it’s got the experience in hosting and .NET to make Azure usable and to help ease customers concerns over the newness of the architecture – most, for example, won’t even know what SQL Azure is or be willing to commit at this stage.

We’ll see if the Microsoft Azure platform will end up in Rackspace data centers.  For now, it’s not in there.  I’m betting that in the next 3 months Microsoft Azure and Rackspace will be partners in this new venture. Lew Moorman, Rackspace’s president for cloud and chief strategy officer, said: “It’s like house hunting and buying the house and every single element in it. You can’t customize or do your own thing, and that’s a big commitment for people… In time we could host it, but people are nervous about giving everything to Microsoft.”

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