Updated: July 16, 2020 (March 6, 2017)

  Analyst Report

Compute and Networking

My Atlas / Analyst Reports

8,687 wordsTime to read: 44 min
Rob Sanfilippo by
Rob Sanfilippo

Before joining Directions on Microsoft, Rob worked at Microsoft for 14 years where he designed technologies for Microsoft products and... more

Azure includes Infrastructure as a Service (IaaS) and Platform as a Service (PaaS) offerings for application workloads running on virtual machines (VMs). Azure Virtual Machines (the IaaS offering) may be of particular interest to organizations migrating to Azure because workloads deployed on-premises or with non-Microsoft hosting providers can be moved to Azure VMs with little or no code rewriting. Subnets can be created to connect Azure VMs together and with on-premises servers. DNS and load balancing services provide control over network activity. A caching service can improve application performance. Azure services also allow scheduled job triggering and automated distribution of workloads across pools of VMs.

New Azure services are often introduced and typically remain in a 50% reduced-price preview state with no service level agreement for three months to a year before becoming generally available for production. (See the illustration “Compute and Networking Services Dates“.)

Atlas Members have full access

Get access to this and thousands of other unbiased analyses, roadmaps, decision kits, infographics, reference guides, and more, all included with membership. Comprehensive access to the most in-depth and unbiased expertise for Microsoft enterprise decision-making is waiting.

Membership Options

Already have an account? Login Now