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Microsoft Azure to debut on 1 January

Ray Ozzie

By Stuart Turton

Posted on 18 Nov 2009 at 08:17

Microsoft has revealed that Azure will be launched on 1 January, though the company won't start charging customers until February.

Azure is Microsoft's cloud computing service, and will allow everybody from home users to businesses to write and host applications on the software giant's data centres.

Speaking at Microsoft's Professional Developers Conference in Los Angeles, the company's chief software architect, Ray Ozzie, claimed that the software's biggest advantage was scalability.

"For consumers, the best result of cloud computing is that they don't notice it," said Ozzie.

Azure lets businesses focus on what they are good at

"Companies that are not in IT - like retailers and manufacturing companies - still deal with their customers on the web. Azure allows us to do the hard work of figuring out how to build those really high-scale systems that deal with all the consumers, and it lets businesses focus on what they are good at."

"What this cloud computing allows IT departments to do, is to just buy computing as you need it. If you have an application that you'd like to run and just try it a little, you only end up paying a little, and if your demand gets greater and greater, then we just turn up the dial and we give you more and more," he added.

Despite planning the launch for January, Microsoft says it will take another month for the company to test its billing systems - which is based on compute time and storage.

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User comments

How does this work

If I have a finance application used by 50 people, how can I move this to the cloud using Azure over an 8Mb internet connection?
How can I get on the server and install and configure etc etc

By a_byrne22 on 18 Nov 2009

i have no interest in cloud computing, and it has nightmare "data protection" complications when people start putting things on 3rd party sites and they (as they are bound to) get compromised in some way. you need control over the data you are responsible 24/7 and can not offload that responsibility even if you subcontract away the actual operation of it. on a side note i found it funny pc world advertised a "cloud" storage for students in a package including mobile broadband with a tiny bundled data allowance. like offering a ferrari and giving a thimble of petrol in the tank

By equityguru on 18 Nov 2009

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