Have you signed up for TechEd 2011 yet? Chances are good that you will be attending a session or two talking about Windows Azure. Back in November of last year my team was in Berlin for TechEd EMEA. We did a lot of great interviews for TechNet Edge focusing on the IT pro.

My favorite interview was one Joey had done with Aashish Dhamdhere. Joey and Aashish talk about recent innovations in Windows Azure and how they relate to the daily work of the IT pro.

Watching the video will give you a good head-start for TechEd this year. While there have been innovations in Windows Azure since then, the video is a great way to get the gist of Windows Azure for the IT pro.

Topics covered are VMRole, Remote Desktop into Windows Azure, Admin Role and many other.

Video: WMV | 3GP | iPod | Zune
Audio: WMA | MP3

Have you signed up for TechEd 2011 yet? Chances are good that you will be attending a session or two talking about Windows Azure. Back in November of last year my team was in Berlin for TechEd EMEA. We did a lot of great interviews for TechNet Edge focusing on the IT pro.

My favorite interview was one Joey had done with Aashish Dhamdhere. Joey and Aashish talk about recent innovations in Windows Azure and how they relate to the daily work of the IT pro.

Watching the video will give you a good head-start for TechEd this year. While there have been innovations in Windows Azure since then, the video is a great way to get the gist of Windows Azure for the IT pro.

Topics covered are VMRole, Remote Desktop into Windows Azure, Admin Role and many other.

 

 

Video: WMV | 3GP | iPod | Zune
Audio: WMA | MP3

IT professionals, we know the drill. Every now and then a new technology or a new paradigm comes our way. Cloud being one of them. They all want to alter all our lives for good. Some enforce adoption, other allow for a smooth transition. But often enough these shift are disruptive in nature. Sometime they are evolutionary. Cloud computing is both. The good news, we IT pros can look behind the curtain and see the opportunity. And we know we have the skills today to be successful.

For the sake of this post, let’s assume we all know and agree on what cloud computing is. BTW, there’s a great definition of cloud computing by the NIST. Take a look if you haven’t already.

What I hope IT professionals get from this short post:

  • Confidence that current skills is all required to discover the opportunities of cloud computing
  • The cloud is not meant to make you or your job redundant, it is meant to help you and the business you support grow.
  • The cloud is the next step in the evolution of computing and you want to be part of it (and be it just for you to be home earlier)

Skills

The benefits of cloud computing and cloud based solutions from Microsoft in particular (disclosure: I lead an IT pro evangelism team at Microsoft) are obvious and plenty. Highlighting the most overlooked and obvious one: Your current skills.

This morning I read an article claiming “New IT skills will be required as cloud computing takes off.” Thankfully that is true. Don’t we all want to learn and keep our skillset up to date, always looking for opportunities to improve? While the author of the before mentioned article is generally right, reading it I had the feeling he describes cloud computing as only disruptive. I disagree with that.

Discovery and Evolution

One aspect of “the cloud” is disruptive in the sense that it enables scenarios like instant access to resources and virtually limitless scalability for any company or business of any size and flavor, without huge upfront investment. But it is also part of the evolution of computing and IT infrastructure. Let’s be more specific.

We spend a lot of time at Microsoft thinking about how we can continue introducing innovations in computing without disrupting your daily business, always keeping the current skills of our customers in mind. No different with Office 365 and Windows Azure or our solutions in Private Cloud.

With our clouds (forgive this nebulous term) you can put your current skills to work immediately. There is no steep learning curve, no new tools. You are good to go.

Regardless if you are the IT guy for your 10 people business or you work for a larger organization’s IT department, you can use your current skills to enable the benefits of the cloud for your company. Don’t let anyone tell you different! Many of the Microsoft tools you work with on a day to day basis are also available to manage solutions that span your local environment and the cloud. Other products, currently not supporting local and cloud based scenarios, are under development and will extend their reach into the cloud soon. There will be sleuth of new tools coming your way too. They all will use concepts you are familiar with and help you help your teams, companies and enterprises to be more successful.

Bring your proven tricks, learn some new

There is no doubt the cloud is not just more of the same old stuff. There’s a whole new world out there. But you already have the skills to take advantage of most of the new
“…abilities”. Start using of some of the new features and do what you have always done best – learn the new tricks while you’re doing the great job you do since you started your career.

At your own pace you will learn additional aspects of cloud computing. Getting more air cover so to speak. To help you, many teams at Microsoft started putting together resources aiming at helping you with your discovery and the evolution to the cloud.

One of the best places to start is the Microsoft Virtual Academy.

The Microsoft Virtual Academy or MVA (we love acronyms you know) is a new online portal help you to improve your technical IT skill set and help advance your career with a free, easy to access training portal. You learn at your own pace, focusing on Microsoft cloud related technologies. To make things fun we added a recognition system. You can gain points and get recognition. As of today we have over 15,000 students registered. This portal will be growing together with you. We constantly expand the MVA with new courses.
The academy highly depends on your feedback and input. We want to add more courses based on your requests. Please take a few lessons and give feedback.

Cloudy and rain in Seattle.

Windows HPC with Burst to Windows Azure

Windows® HPC Server 2008 R2 SP1 enables administrators to increase the power of the on-premises cluster by adding computational resources in Windows Azure. With the Windows Azure “burst” scenario, various types of HPC applications can be deployed to Windows Azure nodes and run on these nodes in the same way they run in on-premises nodes.

Microsoft just published a new technology paper providing a technical overview of developing and managing HPC applications that are supported for the Windows Azure burst scenario. The document covers aspects like application models, data location strategies and considerations, deployment scenarios, and on-premise/off-premise integration.

Download the Windows HPC with Burst to Windows Azure technology brief.

Find additional resources about Windows HPC Server and HPC on Azure here:

Windows HPC TechCenter

Microsoft High Performance Computing for Developers

Microsoft Technical Computing (TC) Labs

HPC Trekker (Author’s blog)

HPC on Channel9

HPC Homepage on microsoft.com

A new plugin for Visual Studio 2010 is available on Codeplex. From the project website:

Python Tools for Visual Studio is a free & open source plug-in for Visual Studio 2010 from Microsoft’s Technical Computing Group. PTVS enables developers to use all the major productivity features of Visual Studio to build Python code using either CPython or IronPython and adds new features such as using High Performance Computing clusters to scale your code. Together with one of the standard distros, you can turn Visual Studio into a powerful Technical Computing IDE…

Note: PTVS is not a Python distribution; it works with your existing Python/IronPython installation to provide you an integrated editing and debugging experience.

The feature overview looks quite impressive, even hints support for Windows Azure in a later version:

  • Advanced editing, Intellisense, browsing, “Find all”, REPL, …
  • Supports CPython and IronPython
  • Local & Cluster/remote debugging
  • Profiling with multiple views
  • Interactive parallel computing via integrated IPython REPL
  • Support for HPC clusters and MPI, including debugging support
  • NumPy & SciPy for .Net
  • Support for Cloud Computing (soon)
  • Support for Dryad (large scale, data-intensive parallel programming) (soon)
  • Free & Open Source (Apache 2.0)

How to figure out what the cost implications (hopefully savings) of cloud computing are? There are as many different pricing models as there are players.

Price per service being not the sole decision criteria, is certainly very important. Most major players offer some sort of ROI calculator or cost analyzer. Here’s what Amazon and Microsoft provide.

Amazon Cost Comparison Calculator

The AWS Economics Center provides access to information, tools, and resources to compare the costs of Amazon Web Services with IT infrastructure alternatives. Our goal is to help developers and business leaders quantify the economic benefits (and costs) of cloud computing.

As part of the center they offer a couple of tools:

  • Amazon EC2 Cost Comparison Calculator. A more or less sophisticated Excel spreadsheet ”…designed to help you quantify the direct economic benefits (or costs) of cloud computing”.
  • The AWS Simple Calculator. A simple html based utility helping with understanding the basic cost structure of Amazon Services you might want to use. It also provides a few customer examples to get you started

Windows Azure Platform TCO and ROI Calculator

The TCO calculator enables companies to not only find out which Windows Azure configuration might be the best fit for they scenario, it also helps to figure out what this will cost and how this compares to your current costs.

The TCO analyzer is available from the pricing info web page for the Windows Azure platform.

This week is the Microsoft (now annual?) Professional Developers Conference PDC 2009 in Los Angeles. We are expecting lots of news about current and future Microsoft products and news about the company’s cloud computing strategy.

Microsoft, side by side with Amazon, Google, SalesForce and maybe Yahoo! is a player in the cloud computing space and with products like Windows Azure, SQL Azure, Microsoft Online Services (BPOS), Exchange Online, certainly one of the heavyweights in everything cloud.

As always, this year’s PDC is first and foremost a conference for developers. And Steve Ballmer is right, a successful infrastructure, platform or service requires “developers, developers, developers”. So they will be getting quite an earful about the Microsoft cloud story. It will be a big coming out party.

But let us not forget we are not there yet. In today’s world of traditional computing, powered by servers in closets, server rooms or datacenters you need highly skilled and experienced IT Professionals keeping things performing, up to date and alive. But what will happen to admins, IT Pros and network and server guys once we use our apps in the cloud?

One of the goals for this blog is to provide IT Pros with the necessary insight and information about “cloud computing”:

  • What is this thing “the cloud”?
  • Who are the players in the cloud?
  • How do their offerings differ?
  • On-premise vs. off-premise
  • Private cloud vs. public cloud
  • XaaS (Everything-as-a-Service)
  • What should an IT Pro expect 1, 3, 5 years after PDC2009?

Stay tuned for more information about PDC and beyond.

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