2014년 10월 31일 금요일

Microsoft adds stream processing and pipeline tools to Azure

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Summary: Microsoft announced a trio of new cloud data services on Wednesday aimed at stream processing and data pipelines. They’re not revolutionary, but they appear to have their own advantages, and they also help ensure Azure keeps up with the Joneses in cloud computing.
Scott Guthrie at Windows Azure 2012 intro
photo: Microsoft
Microsoft continued its rollout of new Azure cloud services on Wednesday, with a trio of features to help users get a better handle on their data. Two of the new features — Stream Analytics and Event Hubs — deal with the processing of data in real time while the third, Data Factory, lets users visually diagram how data moves from one store to another and what happens to it at each step.
Microsoft’s biggest cloud competitors, Amazon Web Services and Google, already have their own stream-processing and pipeline services, so they’re really more like table stakes at this point than they are true points of distinction — except, of course, to the degree that any one is better than the others. Microsoft probably has the strongest hybrid cloud story among the three companies, which might make for more natural connections as pipelines span cloud and local data stores, but the AWS pipeline tool works with local sources as well.
Source: Microsoft
Source: Microsoft
 

Amazon keeps on wooing enterprise admins, this time with Windows System Center support

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Summary:
If you want to win enterprise workloads to your cloud, making it easy for in-house admins to manage their resources from a familiar screen is a good way to start.
AWS Summit
photo: Barb Darrow
If you thought Amazon would let up on its enterprise cloud push, you have another think coming. The company just released a new tool that promises to let Windows admins — folks used to working with Microsoft System Center Virtual Machine Manager (who makes up these awful names?)  — to manage their EC2 instances from a console that will look familiar to them.
Per the AWS blog post:
This add-in allows you to monitor and manage your Amazon Elastic Compute Cloud (EC2) instances (running either Windows or Linux) from within Microsoft System Center Virtual Machine Manager. You can launch new instances and you can also perform common maintenance tasks such as restarting, stopping, and removing instances. You can even connect to the instances using the Remote Desktop Protocol (RDP).
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Microsoft tweaks its server specs as part of Open Compute Project


Summary:
Microsoft, a software power, wants to have a greater say in how data center hardware is designed. And now it’s even got some hardware partners in this effort.
Microsoft's Chicago data center is one of eight worldwide.
photo: Microsoft
In January, Microsoft came out with initial server specifications, building on its experience running big-time data centers, as it joined the Open Compute Project. The idea was to share its experience running those big facilities with hardware makers so they could build the equipment Microsoft and potentially other big tech providers, needs to run infrastructure efficiently.
Now it’s tweaked some of those design specifications with its Open CloudServer v2 recommendations which it’s announcing at the Open Compute Project’s  European Summit
Open Compute Project logoIn a blog post, Kushagra Vaid, GM of server engineering for Microsoft’s cloud and enterprise group, wrote that improvements include:

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EMC cloud really isn’t all about EMC hardware, says EMC product chief

The Structure Show 2014
Summary:     
The storage giant has some secrets up its sleeve including how its acquisition of the Andy Becholsheim-backed DSSD startup will help fire up high-performance next-gen apps.
The Structure Show 2014
Skeptics and smart asses (raising hand here) contend that any cloud delivered by a hardware provider is immediately suspect because it’s just a way for that vendor to sell more of that aforementioned hardware. There is some validity to that theory but there is also nuance. For example, most legacy hardware businesses are now fully into the software game. Count EMC among them.

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