Microsoft News Summary – 9 September 2014

It’s a slow day, so here’s your updates for today. I think the Azure Automation post should be useful – I’ll sure be ripping it off inspired by it for future demos Smile

Hyper-V

Azure

Licensing

Intel 18-Core CPUs Surely Will Affect Microsoft Server Licensing

Read MVP Didier Van Hoye’s take here.

I’ve been thinking for some time (I think VMware even quoted my blog a few years ago) that Microsoft would eventually switch to per-core licensing for Windows Server. I think the emergence of 18-core CPUs makes that inevitable. Right now, if you want 36 cores, you’re probably looking at using 4 x 10-core CPUs, which is 2 Windows Server licenses (each license covers 2 CPUs). Those new CPUs halve Microsoft’s revenue on the upper end of the market.

I would be surprised if, come April, there isn’t an announcement of a change to Windows Server licensing, in conjunction with the GA of Windows Server “2015” (Threshold) in (maybe) May.

The key things here would be:

  • There must be a smooth transition process – when MSFT switched SQL Server to per-core it was quite confusing for resellers and customers. Note that resellers choosing to work with a good distributor helps out quite a bit here, and in turn helps their customers get best value and stay legit!
  • The price for smaller deployments cannot increase. In my opinion, the cost of Windows Server Standard/Datacenter must stay the same on a machine with 2 x 6-core CPUs before and after the release of Threshold. If one dual-CPU (covering 2 6-core CPUs) copy of WS2012 R2 costs $882, then a per-core license should cost $73.50. We can then license that same server with “WS2015” for 12 x 73.50 ($882).

If Microsoft gets it right, then the transition could be smooth. To be honest, I think it might even simplify licensing – the non-techy people who buy licensing struggle with the per-dual CPU model of WS2012 and WS2012 R2.

However, if the ivory tower residents get it wrong (i.e. those same folks think that only Fortune 1000’s and cloud hosters run servers – kids, drugs are baaaad) then we could be looking at a VMware vRAM type of backlash that would do serious damage to the current hot streak that the cloud OS is on.

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Microsoft News Summary – 1 September 2014

Frak! It’s September already!?!?!?! Here’s my first update in a since last Wednesday – travel and events took priority.

The big news broke late on Friday and Saturday. The moron judge presiding over the FBI/Microsoft case cancelled the stay on the order to force Microsoft to turn over data from the Dublin data centre to the US feds, thus breaching privacy and violating Irish and European laws. Microsoft is refusing to comply and is appealing to a higher court in the USA.

Hyper-V

Legal

Azure

Windows Intune

PowerShell

Surface

  • What’s the Future for Surface Tablets? IMO, doom. It’s impossible to sell a business machine to business users if you don’t give businesses a way to buy the device and an SLA-enforced mechanism to support it. First of you to say "BYOD" gets a kick in the groin for drinking 2-year old Gartner KoolAid.

Licensing

VMware

Consumer

Microsoft News Summary – 14 August 2014

There’s a new craze out there with famous people called the Ice Bucket Challenge. A person is dared to take a bucket of ice water over the head (and post the video online) or donate to charity, in in of of “raising awareness” of a disease called ALS. Nadella and Zuckerberg have done it. Gates has been challenged.

Microsoft News Summary – 11 August 2014

I think we can call today’s issue “What’s New in Azure”:

Microsoft News Summary – 8 August 2014

It looks like you will have to use the latest version of IE to be supported after January 2016. That’ll go down like the Hindenburg in businesses.

Microsoft News Summary – 7 August 2014

Very little happening. These quiet times are great for rumours.

Oh – and don’t use Generation 2 virtual machines on WS2012 R2 Hyper-V.

Microsoft Azure Now Available Through Open Licensing

It is August 1st, and today is the very first day that you can buy credit for usage on Azure through Open Licensing. This includes Open, OV, and OVS, as well as educational and government schemes.

How Does It Work?

The process is:

  1. A customer asks to buy X amount of credit from a reseller – the next bit of stuff is normal licensing operations that the customer does not see.
  2. The reseller orders if from a distributor.
  3. The distributor orders the credit from Microsoft.
  4. A notification email is sent out to the customer with a notification to download an OSA (online services activation) key from their VLSC account (used to manage their Open volume licensing). The customer is back in the process at this point.
  5. The customer/partner enters the OSA key in the Azure Account Portal.
  6. The customer/partner configures Azure administrator accounts and credit alerts.

Credit is purchased in blocks of $100. I believe that it is blocks of €75 in the Euro zone. So a customer can request $5000 in credit. They don’t get 50 OSA keys: they get one OSA key with a value of $5000.

Who’s Account Should We Use?

If you are a customer and the MSFT partner wants to set you up under their Azure account, tell them to frak right off. The VMs will be THEIR property. The data will be THEIR property. We have seen this situation with Office 365. Customers have lost access to data for months while MSFT’s legal people try to determine who really owns the data. It is MESSY.

The MSFT partner should always set up the customer’s Azure deployment using a Microsoft Account that is owned by the customer. Additional administrators can be configured. Up to 5 alerts can be configures to send them to the reseller and the customer.

Using Credit

“How much will doing X in Azure cost?” and “How much Azure credit do I need to buy?” will be the two most common questions we distributors will hear in the next 12 months. Ask me and I’ll respond with one of two answers:

  • If I’m in a good mood I’ll tell a consultant to go do some frakking consulting. How the frak am I meant to know what your customer’s needs are? And that’s if I’m in a good mood 🙂
  • If I’m in a bad mood I might award you with a LMGTFY award and make you famous 😀

The answer is based on how credit is used. You buy credit, and everything you do in Azure “burns” that credit. It’s like having credit on a pay-as-you-go (aka “burner”) phone. If you do A then is costs X per minute. If you do B is costs Y per month. Go look at the Azure pricing calculator.

Not all “Azure” services can be purchased via credit. Examples include Azure AD Premium and AD RMS that are licensed via other means, i.e. SaaS like Office 365. Their branding under the Azure banner confuses things.

Credit Time Limits

Your credit in Azure will last for 12 months. It will not roll over. There are no cash-backs. Use it or lose it.

My advice is that you start off by being conservative with your purchasing, determine your burn rate and purchase for X months, rather than for Y years.

Topping Up Credit

You should have configured the email alerts for when credit runs low. If credit runs out then your services shut down. I hope you reserved VIP and server IP addresses!

When you get an alert you have two options:

  • Normal procedure will be to purchase additional credit via the above reseller model. With alerts, the MSFT partner can initiate the conversation with their customer. Obviously this takes a little while – hours/days  (I have no idea because I’m outside of the logistics of licensing).
  • If the customer runs out of credit and the reseller process will take too long or it’s a weekend, the customer can use a credit card to top up their account in the Azure Account Portal. This should be an emergency operation, adding enough credit for the time it will take to top up via the reseller.

Note that old credit is used first, to limit wastage because of the 12 month life of credit.

The Benefits of Open

For the customer, they can use Azure in a controlled manner. You don’t have to buy thousands of dollars of credit through a large enterprise EA license program. You don’t have unmanageable payment via a credit card. You buy up front, see how much it costs, and deploy/budget accordingly.

For the partner it opens up a new world of business opportunities. Resellers have a reason to care about Azure now, just like they did with Office 365 when it went to Open (and that business blew up overnight). They can offer the right solution for customers, private (virtual or cloud), hybrid cloud or public cloud. And they can build a managed services business where they manage the customers’ Azure installations via the Azure Management Portal.

Distributors also win under this scheme by having another product to distribute and build services around.

And, of course, Microsoft wins because they have a larger market that they can sell to. MSFT only sells direct to the largest customers. They rely on partners to sell to the “breadth market”, and adding Azure to Open gives a reason for those partners to resell Azure on Microsoft’s behalf.

Microsoft News Summary – 23 July 2014

Overnight Microsoft news is dominated by their Q4 2014 (MSFT  financial year is July-June and just started FY 2015) returns.

Microsoft News Summary – 14 July 2014

After a week’s break in Finland, I am back with news from the last 10 or so days. It was a busy period!