Microsoft News Summary – 3 July 2014

After a month of neglect, I have finally caught up with all of my feeds via various sources. Here are the latest bits of news, mixed up with other Microsoft happenings from the last month.

Microsoft News Summary-2 July 2014

It’s been a long times since I posted one of these! I’ve just trawled my feeds for interesting articles and came up with the following. I’ll be checking news and Twitter for more.

TechCamp 2014 Presentation – Hybrid Cloud Using Microsoft Azure

This presentation was an introduction for IT pros to deploying hybrid cloud solutions based on Microsoft Azure, in conjunction with on-premises Hyper-V / System Center deployments. Here’s the deck that I presented … and yes … there are LOTS of slides because there is constantly new stuff in Azure.

 

The Hyper-V Amigos Podcast – The Amigos Reunite

You might have heard of “The Hyper-V Amigos” podcast – this is something that has a history that runs back quite a while with a number of us European Hyper-V MVPs. Carsten (Rachfahl) and Didier (Van Hoye) asked myself and Hans Vredevoort to join them in their latest show to talk about TechEd North America 2014.

Microsoft News Summary-4 June 2014

A few bits and pieces from the last 24-48 hours:

Microsoft News Summary-30 May 2014

Greetings from Belgium where I will be presenting a Hyper-V over SMB 3.0 session (designing & implementing a SOFS) at E2EVC, a community virtualization conference. Here is the Microsoft news of the last 24 hours. It appears that the momentum to signing up to support and partner with Azure is growing.

 

Microsoft News Summary-29 May 2014

Not much going on in the last 24 hours:

Microsoft News Summary-28 May 2014

It’s been a slow few days for news. Here’s what popped up overnight.

Microsoft Azure Available Through Open Licensing

I did not expect this announcement until WPC, but it’s come out today. Microsoft announced, via a video, that Microsoft Azure will be available for resellers to sell, and customers to buy, through Open licensing on August 1st 2014. Yes, Azure is coming to the channel. Previously Azure has only been available direct (credit card) or via Enterprise Agreements.

Phil Sorgen took to the webcam to record this message. A blog post was also written by Josh Waldo, Senior Directory, Cloud Partner Strategy. There is also a FAQ for Azure in Open licensing. There will be a “ramp up” online event on Microsoft Azure in Open Licensing on June 4th. Register here.

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Sorgen starts off by saying that Microsoft believes in joint success with partners, and in making business with Microsoft easier for partners. These two pillars are central to an exciting new opportunity for partners.

He announces it: Azure will be available through the distribution channel via Open licensing for partners to resell to their customers.

Azure allows partners to serve more customers without increasing their footprint. Successful cloud partners have learned how to expand their services beyond basic deployments. Think business IT-enabled consulting. Partners have increased revenues, but they had to evolve their business models.

Personally, I know of one services business that automates to an incredible level and cloud services fits their model perfectly. Before the recession they shifted tin like everyone; they evolved and now they are flourishing, and taking business from legacy service providers.

“Moving to cloud is a process not an event”: true for partners and customers. Azure can become even moer compelling. Note that Azure contains many hybrid cloud services, enabling “on ramps” to services that extend the functionality of on-premises IT, making it easier for businesses to explore and adopt Microsoft’s public and hybrid cloud offering.

Azure in Open will be flexible, provide compliance manageability, and provide value for customers. The consumption based billing provides a low barrier to entry, making it easier for SMEs to deploy services without huge CapEx costs. “Consumption aligned billing” is one of the buzz phrases. Focus on services instead of tin.

There is a new licensing model with Azure in Open.

Moving over to the blog post:

The cloud is growing 5 times faster than traditional IT. Microsoft alone is thought to purchase 17% of all servers on the planet in a year. “Additionally, partners that are building strong cloud businesses have 1.6X of recurring revenue as a portion of total revenue versus other partners”.

How does this licensing model work?

When you resell Azure in Open Licensing, you purchase tokens from your preferred Distributor and apply the credit to the customer’s Azure Portal in increments of $100. The credits can be used for any consumption-based service available in Azure. To add more credit, you simply purchase new tokens and add them to the account. This gives you the opportunity to manage your customer’s portal, setup services, and monitor consumption, all while maintaining a direct relationship.

In other words, you will buy Azure credit in the form of $100 tokens (I guess there will be localized versions). You can then use that credit in any way on Azure. It will be up to you (the end customer) to have enough credit to do what you need to do or to keep your services online. The advantage here is that you’re controlling costs (unlike post-usage credit card) and you don’t need to pre-purchase a huge credit (like with EA) before you know what your services will cost. I suspect that if partners want to, they can operate a service to help customers manage their credit.

A token comes in the form of an Online Services Activation (OSA) key. If you want $1000 in credit, you buy 10 SKUs of $100 and get 1 OSA key for the sum credit. The value has a 12 month life, starting from when the customer redeems the OSA key online – this credit will not roll over so don’t over purchase for a year. A customer can top up at any time. If they cannot reach a reseller (weekend), the customer can top up using a credit card. The program will be available through:

  • Open commercial
  • Open Academic
  • Open Government

Partners can request co-administrator accounts on their customers’ accounts to help them manage their service. Alerts can be configured for when credit runs low and needs to be topped up.

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IMO, this is great news for partners. They can now choose to resell Azure if they want, and keep the billing/customer relationship – something that caused fear in the past (“cloud vendor X is trying to steal my customers”). Some might not want billing overhead and might go with another option.

Also, this announcement reinforces Microsoft’s unique selling point in the cloud wars. They are the only company with a private/public hybrid cloud model that spans on-premises customer owned, hosting partners, and Azure. Microsoft is also the only cloud vendor with a partner-enabling model.

By the way, partners & customers in Ireland, if you want your techies to learn about Hybrid Cloud then you might want to send them to TechCamp 2014 in June.

TechEd NA 2014–Extending Your Premises To Microsoft Azure With Virtual Networks And ExpressRoute

Speakers: Ganesh Srinivasan (Azure Networking), Jai Desai (StorSimple), Jon Ormond (MSIT).

Legacy Connections for Site-Site in Azure

  • Secure point-site VPN: for developers. POCs. Small scale deployments. VPN in from a machine. Based on STP.
  • Secure site-to-site VPN: This is for SMB and enterprises. Connect your business to Azure compute. IaaS and PaaS workloads. Configuration generally done on and on-rem edge device. Based on IPsec.

Now added: Private site-to-site called ExpressRoute. For SMB (with WAN) and enterprises. Mission critical workloads. Backup/DR, Media, HPC. Based on services provided by WAN ISP that are Azure networking partners.

Virtual Network Recap

Software defined private network in Azure. You carve out your own IP space/subnets. Can punch holes through Azure firewall for public presence. VPN connects to the virtual network via an edge subnet.

In-Region VNet to VNet

You want security between tiers or services so you put them in different virtual networks. In the same region, there are no data transfer costs. You can punch holes through firewalls to let services communicate.

Cross-region VNet to VNet

Need local presences across the glob but with interconnectivity. For HA/DR also. Can communicate securely using private IP addresses.

Multi-site VNet Connectivity

Up to 10 on-prem sites can connect into a single VNet in Azure. They may be geographically dispersed.

VPN Partners

Watchguard, OpenSwan, Cisco, Fortinet, Brocade, Sonicawall, Checkpoint, Juniper, F5, Allie Telesis, and Windows Server 2012 R2.

ExpressRoute

Other techs go via public internet so you have dependencies on many ISPs between you and Microsoft. Lots of chokepoints. It might be secure (IPsec), but you cannot build SLA on this. ExpressNetwork brings Azure VNets into your WAN. Now you connect to Azure via a private, SLA controlled WAN connection managed by your ISP, subject to your contract with them.

Enterprise Workloads

All services are made available, and not just VNets. VPN is limited to VPN. You also have controlled and predictable latency. This means there are lots more workloads that you can do over ExpressRoute:

  • Storage/backup/recovery
  • Dev/test lab
  • BI/big data
  • Media
  • Hybrid apps
  • Productivity apps

SharePoint has generated lots of interest as a service over ExpressRoute from customers.

Two Flavours

  • Depoy “on prem” at a colo facility such as provided by Equinox. You can route via colo facility to Azure. Probably requires lots of work for you and additional h/w.
  • Use an Azure ExpressRoute partner as your WAN provider. Then your sites connect direct to Azure. Almost a light switch. Probably no additional h/w.

Partners

Equinix, TelecityGroup, BT, AT&T, Level3, Verizon, SingTel

BT important for UK/Ireland. Telecity are important for Europe. If you are not with any of these, “talk to us” according to the speaker, and “we will figure it out”.

ExpressRoute Tiers

Unlimited inbound data transfer. You get some outbound data for free and above that there is a charge.

  • 200 Mbps + 3 TB Month free
  • 500 Mbps and 7.5 TB/month free
  • 1 Gbps + 15 TB/month free
  • 10 Gbps and 250 TB free/month

Customer Connectivity

If you do VPN then you can only access compute that runs in VNets. If you do ExpressRoute then you can access anything. And of course, if you punch holes in firewalls, then you can make services available publicly.

Common misconception: stuff you place in Azure is public. No: it’s only public if you make it that way. Your Azure services can be completely private if you want.

Customer Sign Up Experience

Talk to MSFT and ask for partners in a location. You get a key. Pass that on to the service provider. They query Microsoft and then they create a cross connection between you and Azure. You then set up BGP routes between you and Azure. And then you are connected.

In the case of a WAN provider, the routing is done for you.

Demo

He creates an ExpressRoute connection via the web ONLY using MSFT WAN and AT&T. The whole process is basically orchestrated. Should take no more than 5 minutes to complete after walking through the wizards.

He VPNs into Microsoft and can ping and Azure VM over the new WAN connection.

Another ping demo: between 1-2 MS latency between a MSFT office in California and a SharePoint farm in Azure over ExpressRoute (think he said US East region).

Fails over the SharePoint SQL database (guest OS install) from one region to another – takes about 3-4 seconds.

We now get Jon Ormond of MS IT to talk about how they are using ExpressRoute.

MSFT IT

LOTS of internal little apps that they have no interest in rewriting as PaaS apps. They use IaaS to run those VMs in Azure – doing that lift & shift now. Need a robust network connection. This is why they use ExpressRoute. They want to end up with 95% of VMs in “the cloud” both private (WAP) and public (Azure).

He does a demo using PowerShell to create the connection. Can also do this using REST API.

Jai Desai, a TSP takes over to talk StorSimple. I tune out here … a StorSimple talk.