Posts Tagged ‘Microsoft Cloud Server’

Microsoft Opening Software and Services Excellence Center

Thursday, June 3rd, 2010

Steven Guggenheimer, Corporate Vice President of the original equipment manufacturer division at Microsoft Corporation today announced the opening of the Microsoft Software and Services Excellence Center (SSEC).

The main purpose of the center is to advance the potential of cloud computing across devices, in the data center and within new industries-all topics Steve Ballmer, CEO of Microsoft, addressed when he visited Taiwan last year. Via the Microsoft SSEC, Microsoft combines its R&D expertise and technology leadership in software, services and cloud datacenter technologies with Taiwan’s global leadership in hardware innovation in order to create next- generation connected devices and cloud data centers, creating new business opportunities for Microsoft and its partners. Moreover, Microsoft will license patents from its industry-leading portfolio and share its software development expertise with academic and R&D institutes in Taiwan to help strengthen the software and services technologies for the Taiwan Information and Communication Technology (ICT) ecosystem.

“Over the past two decades, hardware manufacturers in Taiwan have established their global leadership in PCs, netbooks, cell phones, LCDs, and other IT technologies, which is important for the global ICT industry,” said Steven Guggenheimer, who helped celebrate the center’s opening. “The opening of the SSEC is a significant milestone for Microsoft and its hardware partners in our collaboration for the development of additional business opportunities in the era of cloud computing.”

“Cloud computing services are a strategic industry that the government is promoting, and the Microsoft Software and Service Excellent Center will expedite the development of the Taiwan ICT industry towards cloud services,” said Wu Ming-Ji, Director General, Department of Industrial Technology, Ministry of Economic Affairs. “The Taiwan ICT industry will be able to bring in the most advanced software technologies as well as cloud data center implementation experience from Microsoft to integrate them with the existing system and R&D resources provided by the government. This will not only strengthen the existing competitiveness of the Taiwan hardware industry but also develop new business opportunities from cloud services. We believe that the integration of existing government resources with innovations provided by Microsoft is going

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How Microsoft and Oracle Differ in the Cloud

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

Earlier this week at Cloud Expo executives from Microsoft and Oracle discussed the differences in the way they see cloud servers working with enterprise businesses.  Microsoft whole emphasis was on public cloud offerings while Oracle talked all about tools for building out internal clouds.

Hal Stern, Oracle president and former Sun Microsystems chief technology officer for services said “I’d argue that if you’d run today’s applications in the cloud with exactly the same utilization as you would in your own data center … [it] will probably cost you more.”  The advantage of the cloud, Stern argued, is elasticity. It is those “impulse functions of demand, where you want to go to 100 CPUs to 1,000 CPUs, but give them back,” he said.

Stern later said “If you look at every one of the cases that has been held up as a great case of public cloud, they ran for a period time and then put the resources back. That’s what made them cost effective.”

“When building multitier applications, it is inevitable that you will have to piece together multiple components,” said Arvind Jain, Oracle product strategy director, in a presentation of the new technologies. “The ideal environment for the application developer teams would be an IT infrastructure that would be easily and readily provisioned, so the teams can focus on the application logic.”

Cloud computing is different from simply rehosting, for a number of reasons, Khalidi said.

For one, applications must be built with “scale-out architectures, rather than scale-up architectures,” he said. This means that if you need an application to serve more users, you should be able to spin out more instances of that application. “You have to think about state in a different way.”

“We are very serious about the cloud. We view it as a natural extension of on-premise software,” said Yousef Khalidi, a Microsoft distinguished engineer working on the Microsoft Azure cloud offering, during his talk. “We believe in a hybrid model going forward, that would span the whole spectrum.”

Full Microsoft and Oracle Cloud Server Article

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