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November 17, 2009

PDC 2009: Microsoft Launches Cloud Computing Platform

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As expected, Microsoft launched its forthcoming cloud computing platform, Windows Azure, on the opening day of its Professional Developers Conference (PDC) 2009 event in Los Angeles. The service will transition from its current "community technical preview" state to a feature-complete, final version on January 1, 2010, the software giant said. But customers won't be billed until February, so they can determine what the costs will be during the preceding month.

"Customers want choice and flexibility in how they develop and deploy applications," Microsoft Chief Software Architect Ray Ozzie said. "We're moving into an era of solutions that are experienced by users across PCs, phones, and the web, and that are delivered from datacenters we refer to as private clouds and public clouds. Built specifically for this era of cloud computing, Windows Azure and SQL Azure will give developers what they need to build great applications and profitable businesses."

The Windows Azure cloud computing platform extends Windows Server into the hosted services space, providing developers with a way to create applications and services that run in the cloud instead of in on-premise servers. This provides a more reliable and cost-effective platform in many scenarios, Microsoft says, and represents a major shift in the way that businesses and consumers utilize computing resources.

The Windows Azure launch was announced during a keynote address on the first day of the PDC. This keynote was cloud-computing-heavy and included several new announcements related to Windows Azure. Among them are a new information service, code-named "Dallas," that provides access to premium commercial and reference data sets and content from providers such as the Associated Press, NASA, and the United Nations; an online marketplace for partner applications called PinPoint; and Windows Server AppFabric (currently in beta), which helps developers manage and deploy applications that span from local Windows Servers to the cloud.

While Tuesday's keynote was largely about cloud computing, Microsoft promises some desktop-related news on Wednesday. In addition to a push for Windows 7 technologies and the Office 2010 public beta, the software giant is expected to show off an early version of Internet Explorer (IE) 9, the next version of its web browser.

For ongoing live coverage from the show, please stay tuned to the SuperSite for Windows throughout the week.

End of Article



Reader Comments
in the mean time, apple is keeps struggling with it's 1990's inspied www.me.com.

what's apple cloud is starting to look more and more like a cloud that's about to vanish into thin air. In their case, vanish into nokia 2.0

guruguru November 17, 2009 (Article Rating: )


@ guruguru:

Yes. Now all Microsoft has to do is get the planet to trust it with its data.

http://news.cnet.com/8301-13860_3-10372525-56.html

infiniteloop November 18, 2009 (Article Rating: )


@infiniteloop:
as it has been debunked many times, MS wasn't runing azure on that center or was even involved in the design and management. It was managed by Danger using old technology and poor backup practices. In the end they recovered the data.

http://gizmodo.com/5382208/most-if-not-all-sidekick-data-recovered

Azure is a distributed system with no single point of failure.

however, I can tell you that you can log in as a guest account and not loose all your data in any MS operating system...that is unlike in snow leaopard (aka vista for macs).
http://www.itnews.com/mac-os/9306/snow-leopard-bug-deletes-all-user-data

and unlike MS, apple never got the data back. goes to show who can you REALLY trust you data to. certainly not apple.

guruguru November 18, 2009 (Article Rating: )


@ guruguru:

The bug affected a small number of people, not thousands, and is now fixed.

The question here is about trust. Microsoft are a convicted Monopolist. Would you trust mission critical data to a criminal?

Regardless of who was managing or running what, Microsoft were responsible.

Microsoft have a woeful security record. (conficker anyone?) And with all that juicy info stored up in the cloud, it's a fantastic target.

No thanks.

infiniteloop November 18, 2009 (Article Rating: )


@ guruguru:

Enjoy.

http://www.thestreet.com/story/10628071/1/apples-decade-a-matter-of-trust.html

infiniteloop November 18, 2009 (Article Rating: )


"guruguru", was this story about Apple? No. Does Apple offer a comparable service to what's being discussed in the actual story? No. Has Apple announced any plan to do anything like Microsoft is doing her? No. Is there any reason other than a desire to bash Apple to bring up a comparison that clearly makes no sense whatsoever? No.

Troll. You deserve every "infiniteloop" comment that comes your way.

"I can tell you that you can log in as a guest account and not loose [sic] all your data in any MS operating system...that is unlike in snow leaopard [sic]"

The bug was rare, affected very few users, was easily reversed for users running the built-in and automated backup tools included in the OS, and has been fixed in the latest update. Your point vis-a-vis Micorsoft's cloud computing initiative (you know...the point of the article) was WHAT exactly?

lotsamystuff November 18, 2009 (Article Rating: )


No more comments? I was digging the 3-way troll battle.

jersey72 November 20, 2009 (Article Rating: )


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