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Microsoft’s Azure gets launch date, new services

Microsoft’s Azure gets launch date, new services

By:  Rafael Ruffolo  On: 17 Nov 2009 For: ComputerWorld Canada Creator

It seems that even Microsoft’s annual Professional Developers Conference can’t escape significant cloud computing news. Find out what new services Microsoft is rolling out as its Azure cloud platform heads to a Jan. 1 launch date

Microsoft’s other new offering is an Azure subsystem codenamed Dallas, a tool that allows developers to plug popular data streams right into their apps. Currently, Microsoft has loaded in U.S. government census data, mapping information from NAVTEQ, and assorted data from NASA, the Associated Press, and many other sources.

This new “dataset-as-a-service” offering is also currently available as a community tech preview, Jeans said.

“Historically, you’ve have to license this data,” Jeans said. “This provides a centralized point that app developers can connect to and make use of that dataset.”

Jeans added that Dallas’ usage and pricing model would not be determined until Microsoft is able to gauge user interest in the community tech preview.

For Ryan St. Hilaire, product manager at Vancouver-based Web developer Vision Critical, the ability to avoid purchasing and maintaining this data streams will be helpful to many developers, especially with census and mapping data in such high demand from end-users.

“A large drug store company might want to know where somebody shopped recently and want to overlay store data with map data,” he said.

When conducting market research surveys, St. Hilaire added, the same company might also want to take that customer data and compare it with census data from Azure.










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Rafael Ruffolo Rafael Ruffolo was a senior writer for ComputerWorld Canada from 2006 to 2011. He was the winner of a Kenneth R. Wilson award for business journalism in 2009.

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