What Is Microsoft Azure and How Does It Work - Definition From TechTarget
What Is Microsoft Azure and How Does It Work - Definition From TechTarget
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What is public cloud? A definition and in-depth guide
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DEFINITION
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Microsoft Azure, formerly known as Windows Azure, is Microsoft's public cloud computing
platform. It provides a broad range of cloud services, including compute, analytics, storage and
o networking. Users can choose from these services to develop and scale new applications or run
existing applications in the public cloud.
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The Azure cloud platform aims to help businesses manage challenges and meet their
n
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organizational goals. It offers tools that support all industries -- including e-commerce, finance and
a variety of Fortune 500 companies -- and is compatible with open source technologies. This gives
users the flexibility to use their preferred tools and technologies.
In addition, Azure offers four different forms of cloud computing: infrastructure as a service (IaaS),
platform as a service (PaaS), software as a service (SaaS) and serverless functions.
Microsoft charges for Azure on a pay-as-you-go (PAYG) basis, meaning subscribers receive a bill
each month that only charges them for the specific resources and services they have used.
Chart comparing SaaS, PaaS, Iaas and FaaS cloud computing services.
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Microsoft provides the following five different customer support options for Azure:
Basic. 3
Developer.
Standard.
Professional Direct.
Enterprise (Premier).
These customer support plans vary in terms of scope and price. Basic support is available to all
Azure accounts, but Microsoft charges a fee for the other support offerings. Developer support
costs $29 per month, while Standard support costs $100 per month and Professional Direct
support is $1,000 per month. Microsoft does not disclose the pricing for Enterprise support.
What is Microsoft Azure? An Introduction
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Running containers. Running VMs or containers in the Microsoft cloud is one of the most
popular uses for Microsoft Azure. These compute resources can host infrastructure
components, such as domain name system (DNS) servers; Windows Server services, such as
Internet Information Services; networking services, such as firewalls; or third-party
applications. Microsoft also supports the use of third-party operating systems, such as Linux.
Hosting databases. Azure is also commonly used as a platform for hosting databases in the
cloud. Microsoft offers serverless relational databases, such as Azure SQL, and nonrelational
databases, such as NoSQL.
Backup and disaster recovery. The Azure platform is frequently used for backup and disaster
recovery. Many organizations use Azure for archival storage in order to meet their long-term
data retention or disaster recovery requirements.
Developing and hosting applications. The Azure platform is utilized for application
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development, hosting and testing. With Azure's PaaS capabilities, developers can instantly
deploy and scale apps without managing the underlying infrastructure or code.
Machine learning (ML) and artificial intelligence (AI). Azure offers various ML tools,
including Azure Machine Learning and Azure AI Studio, that businesses can utilize to build,
deploy and train ML models. These tools are especially beneficial for organizations adopting
ML and AI for predictive analytics, customer insights and automation.
Cost efficiency. Migrating to Azure can substantially lower the IT costs for businesses
compared to maintaining their own on-premises infrastructure. With a PAYG pricing model,
organizations only pay for the resources they use, helping them manage budgets and reduce
capital expenses.
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AI and advanced analytics. Azure offers advanced analytics tools and AI services that help
businesses extract valuable insights from their data and enhance their decision-making
processes.
Global reach and high availability. Azure's global infrastructure enables businesses to
access applications and data from anywhere and also ensures high availability and
redundancy. For example, even if one component fails, applications and data remain
accessible to the end users.
Security and compliance. Azure provides enhanced security through its multilayered
protection across its data centers and infrastructure. The platform includes various security
measures and compliance certifications, enabling businesses to safeguard their data from
threats, maintain customer trust and meet regulatory standards.
Support for open source technologies. To provide organizations with the flexibility to utilize
their preferred systems and frameworks, Azure is compatible with a broad range of open
source tools and technologies, such as Linux and Kubernetes.
Compute. The compute services enable a user to deploy and manage VMs, containers and
batch jobs, as well as support remote application access. Compute resources created within
the Azure cloud can be configured with either public Internet Protocol (IP) addresses or private
IP addresses, depending on whether the resource needs to be accessible to the outside world.
Mobile. These products help developers build cloud applications for mobile devices, providing
notification services, support for back-end tasks, tools for building application programming
interfaces (APIs) and the ability to couple geospatial context with data.
Web. These services support the development and deployment of web apps. They also offer
features for search, content delivery, API management, notification and reporting.
Storage. This category of services provides scalable cloud storage for structured and
unstructured data. It also supports big data projects, persistent storage and archival storage.
Analytics. These services provide distributed analytics and storage, as well as features for
real-time analytics, big data analytics, data lakes, machine learning, business intelligence, IoT
data streams and data warehousing.
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Networking. This group includes virtual networks, dedicated connections and gateways as
well as services for traffic management and diagnostics, load balancing, DNS hosting and
network protection against distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks.
Media and content delivery network (CDN). These CDN services include on-demand
streaming, digital rights protection, encoding, and media playback and indexing.
Integration. These are services for server backup, site recovery and connecting private and
public clouds.
Serverless computing. Azure supports serverless computing and architectures that let
developers build applications without managing servers. This helps with the automatic scaling
of resources and enables the developers to focus on coding instead of managing the
underlying infrastructure. For example, Azure Functions enables developers to write and
execute code in their preferred language without managing servers.
Identity. These offerings ensure only authorized users can access Azure services and help
protect encryption keys and other sensitive information in the cloud. Services include support
for Microsoft Entra ID and multifactor authentication.
IoT. These services help users capture, monitor and analyze IoT data from sensors and other
devices. Services include notifications, analytics, monitoring and support for coding and
execution.
DevOps. This group provides project and collaboration tools, such as Azure DevOps --
formerly Visual Studio Team Services -- that facilitate DevOps software development
processes. It also offers features for application diagnostics, DevOps tool integrations and test
labs for build tests and experimentation.
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Development. These services help application developers share code, test applications and
track potential issues. Azure supports a range of application programming languages, including
JavaScript, Python, .NET, Go and Node.js. Tools in this category also include support for Azure
DevOps, software development kits and blockchain.
Security and identity management. These products provide capabilities to identify and
respond to cloud security threats as well as manage encryption keys and other sensitive
assets.
AI and machine learning. This is a wide range of services that a developer can use to infuse
AI, ML and cognitive computing capabilities into applications and data sets.
Containers. These services help an enterprise create, register, orchestrate and manage huge
volumes of containers in the Azure cloud, using common container platforms such as Docker
and orchestration platforms including Kubernetes.
Databases. This category includes database-as-a-service offerings for SQL and NoSQL, as
well as other database instances -- such as Azure Cosmos DB and Azure Database for
PostgreSQL. It also includes Azure Synapse Analytics support, caching, and hybrid database
integration and migration features. Azure SQL is the platform's flagship database service. It is a
relational database that provides SQL functionality without the need for deploying a SQL
server.
Migration. This suite of tools helps an organization estimate workload migration costs and
perform the actual migration of workloads from local data centers to the Azure cloud.
Mixed reality. These services are designed to help developers create content for the Windows
Mixed Reality environment.
Intune. Microsoft Intune can be used to enroll user devices, thereby making it possible to push
security policies and mobile apps to those devices. Mobile apps can be deployed either to
groups of users or to a collection of devices. Intune also provides tools for tracking which apps
are being used. A remote wipe feature enables the organization's data to be securely removed
from devices without removing a user's mobile apps in the process.
Chart comparing Azure Stack offerings: Azure Stack Edge, Azure, Azure Stack Hub and Azure Stack HCI.
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According to the Trust Center, Microsoft will only use customer data if it is necessary to provide
the agreed-upon services and it will never disclose customer data to government agencies unless
it is required by law.
At the same time, Azure provides numerous security services, such as identity and access
management (IAM) and firewalls, to help Azure users establish a secure infrastructure and monitor
for intrusion in a timely manner. Security services are critical to public cloud adoption by helping
users safeguard the privacy of sensitive data and important workloads.
For example, a common application running in a VM might incur one cost. The storage instance
associated with the workload might incur a second cost. Networking services and reporting tools
might all drive additional costs for the workload. Alternatively, services such as Azure Functions
are free, but users pay for the compute and other resources needed to run the function for the
duration of the function's execution -- usually to the closest second. 3
In addition, if a user makes a long-term commitment to certain services, such as compute
instances, Microsoft offers a discounted rate. For example, Azure reserved VM instances claim to
save users up to 80% on VM costs.
Even simple applications can involve many interdependent cloud services and resources. Given
the many factors involved in cloud service pricing, an organization should review and manage its
cloud usage to minimize costs. Azure-native tools, such as Microsoft Cost Management, can help
monitor, visualize and optimize cloud spending. It's also possible to use third-party tools, such as
IBM Cloudability, along with emerging FinOps practices to manage Azure resource usage and
associated costs.
July 26, 2012. The West Europe region experienced an interruption that lasted for about two
and a half hours.
Feb. 22, 2013. A major outage prevented customers across all regions from being able to
access Windows Azure Storage Blobs, tables and queues using HTTPS.
Oct. 30, 2013. Users across the United States, Europe and Asia experienced an outage lasting
for about eight hours. This outage was attributed to an issue with swapping virtual IP 3
addresses.
Nov. 18, 2014. An outage lasting for nearly 10 hours caused storage connectivity issues.
Dec. 3, 2015. Many customers in Europe were unable to access Office 365 for approximately
four hours.
Sept. 15, 2016. A DNS issue caused problems for Azure users around the world for several
hours.
March 15, 2017. An issue in one of Microsoft's data centers spread around the world and
ultimately affected 26 of Microsoft's 28 data centers, resulting in a worldwide outage that lasted
for about seven hours.
Sept. 29, 2017. A seven-hour outage occurred in northern Europe due to the accidental
discharge of a fire suppression system.
June 20, 2018. Customers in northern Europe experienced an outage lasting nearly 11 hours
following a temperature issue at one of the data centers.
Sept. 4, 2018. Lightning strikes caused a voltage increase in a south-central United States
data center, resulting in issues with the cooling system. Customers across 10 regions were
ultimately affected because of service dependencies.
May 2, 2019. A DNS outage caused several Azure services to become unavailable for nearly
three hours.
March 15, 2021. An Azure Active Directory outage caused a 14-hour outage in multiple
Microsoft services, including Azure, Office, Teams, Dynamics 365, Xbox Live and more. A
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smaller DNS outage followed on April 1, 2021.
Oct. 13, 2021. Azure VM services and some other Azure services became unavailable for
about eight hours.
Jan. 23, 2023. Azure faced a three-hour outage affecting its core Microsoft 365 offerings,
including services such as Outlook and Teams. This disruption was attributed to network issues
within Azure, which affected a wide range of users and organizations relying on these services.
July 30, 2024. Azure suffered a major global outage lasting for almost eight hours, which
affected various Microsoft services, including Azure, Microsoft 365 products and LinkedIn. This
global outage was a result of a sophisticated DDoS attack, which was worsened by a
vulnerability in Microsoft's DDoS Protection Standard.
Microsoft maintains a complete index of all outages/issues for the last five years. Users can
research specific outages, detailed implications, underlying causes and fixes at Microsoft's Azure
status history page.
Azure competition
Microsoft Azure is one of several major public cloud service providers operating on a large global
scale. Other major clouds include Google Cloud, AWS, Oracle, IBM Cloud and Alibaba Cloud.
Currently, there is a lack of standardization among cloud services and capabilities.
Most cloud providers offer a broad suite of similar services, but no two cloud providers offer the
same service in the exact same way. Cloud providers rely on APIs and other integrations to handle
provisioning and services programmatically. Because each provider uses unique APIs, the onus is
on users to accommodate differences between cloud providers. Thus, migrating a workload from 3
one cloud to another might require significant recoding of the application or rearchitecting of the
cloud environment to support the workload. This makes it difficult for a business to use more than
one public cloud provider when pursuing a multi-cloud strategy. Third-party cloud management
tools can reduce some of these challenges.
In addition to major cloud providers, Azure faces competition in the small to midsize sector. For
example, DigitalOcean is a popular alternative for small to midsize companies looking for cloud
services.
Chart comparing Oracle, AWS, Azure and Google cloud platforms and their services.
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k Compare the always-free and free-tier offerings from major cloud providers.
Azure history
Microsoft first unveiled its plans to introduce a cloud computing service called Windows Azure in
2008. Preview versions of the service became available and developed, leading to its commercial
launch in early 2010. Although early iterations of Azure cloud services fell behind more established
offerings, such as AWS, the portfolio continued to evolve and support a larger base of
programming languages, frameworks and operating systems.
In 2014, Microsoft rebranded Windows Azure to Microsoft Azure, reflecting its broader scope
beyond just Windows-based services. By early 2014, Microsoft had added and updated a wide
range of services including Azure SQL, Windows Azure CTP, Windows Azure Connect, Traffic
Manager and HPC scheduler. Microsoft recognized that the implications of cloud computing
stretched far beyond Windows, and the service was rebranded as Microsoft Azure. In addition,
Azure rolled out the first public previews of Machine Learning services.
In the following years, Azure introduced Sonic (a cross-platform Linux distribution), Azure 3
Resource Manager Portal (2015), Azure Service Fabric (2016), Azure Service Fabric Mesh (2018)
and Azure IoT Central (2018). Today, Azure is regarded as a strong commercial competitor to
other public cloud providers.
8 Characteristics of Cloud Computing
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All major cloud providers, including Microsoft Azure, Amazon AWS and Google Cloud, offer robust
IAM frameworks, but they differ in their features, configuration, resource hierarchy and pricing
models. Compare these IAM differences to help select the best option for your organizational
needs and technology ecosystems.
This was last updated in January 2025
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