For the kickoff of Microsoft’s annual North American TechEd conference, the
company is urging administrators and IT professionals to think of it as the
provider of the “Cloud OS.”
Microsoft announced a sweeping range of updates to its line of enterprise
software, all aimed at bridging on-premises systems with cloud services offered
by Microsoft and its service providers. It also announced updates to its Azure
cloud service.
“If you step back and [see] what is fundamentally happening in the
industry, the definition of the operating systems is changing and expanding. Its
role is to provide an abstraction layer between the application and the
hardware, but it has to do that at the scale of the data center or the cloud,
not at the level of the individual server,” said Brad Anderson, Microsoft’s
corporate vice president of Windows Server and System Center, in a press
conference that followed the opening keynote.
Among the new releases announced were the introductions of Windows Server
2012 R2, System Center 2012 R2, Team Foundation Server 2013, a new version of
Windows Intune and SQL Server 2014. All but SQL Server 2014, which will be
released early next year, will be available as preview editions by the end of
the month and generally available by the end of the year.
Many of the features make these products work with Microsoft’s Azure cloud
service, or a company’s in-house cloud service, more handily. For instance,
Windows Server 2012 R2 can accelerate the speed of VM (virtual machine) live
migration. Through the use of de-duplication technologies, the migration process
can only move those bits that are unique to each VM, saving the time of copying
the parts of a VM that are identical across all instances. It also uses the RDMA
(remote direct memory access) protocol to further cut migration time.
Between the two technologies, VM live migration from one server to another
can take only half as long as the previous methods used in Windows Server, noted
Jeff Woolsey, Microsoft principal program manager, who was one of the presenters
in addition to Anderson at the keynote.
Windows Server 2012 R2 also offers automated storage tiering, which will
help organizations manage large amounts of data more easily, without the help of
SANs (storage area networks). With this feature, the server can recognize which
data is being accessed the most and move it to the fastest hard drives, such as
solid state drives, to improve performance, Woolsey noted.
New cloud services
To help organizations come to terms with the idea of the Cloud OS,
Microsoft plans to release the Windows Azure Pack for Windows Server. The Azure
Pack includes a number of tools that will allow organizations to offer their own
in-house services as cloud services, as well as bridge management of in-house
resources with Azure-based resources, Anderson said. It includes a portal that
users can use to manage the IT for their own projects. It also provides tools
for high-density hosting of applications on a single server as well as for
managing configurations of user systems.
Microsoft also announced price changes to its Azure cloud services. An
announcement from Scott Guthrie, corporate vice president in the Microsoft
developer division, that Microsoft would bill on a per minute granularity for
usage of stock VMs was greeted with enthusiastic applause. Previously, bills
were rounded up to the nearest hour. Now, if a VM only runs for six minutes the
customer will be charged only for six minutes and not a full hour, Guthrie
said.
Per-minute billing would save a lot of money for developers, who could do
lots of short tests on Azure. Guthrie also announced a number of Azure discounts
for members of the Microsoft Developer Network.
The Hyper-V Recovery Manager is another new Microsoft service. It runs as a
service on Azure, though organizations can use it to manage in-house VMs. If the
administration’s primary system goes down, the administrator can use the service
to start copies of the VMs that reside elsewhere.
“Disaster recovery has never been this easy,” Woolsey said.
In addition to Azure, Microsoft is offering other cloud services through
Intune, its Internet-based computer management service. Developed for small
offices with limited IT help, Intune provides a set of automated updating and
management functionality for keeping Windows-based business computers in
operating order. A quiet success for Microsoft, Intune now is used by over
35,000 organizations, according to the company.
This new version of the service can now manage Android and Apple iOS
devices, helping administrators work with their employees’ consumer mobile
devices, a trend known as BYOD, for bring your own device. Molly Brown,
principal development lead at Microsoft, showed how an employee can access
internal IT resources, through a new feature called “workplace join.”
In conjunction with Windows Server 2012 R2 and System Center 2012 R2,
Intune can allow these devices to tap into internal company VPNs (virtual
private networks), access data files and download enterprise apps from an app
store. When the employee leaves the organization, Intune can wipe the
organization data, leaving the personal data untouched.
Windows 8.1
Iain McDonald, Microsoft director of program management for Windows core,
also previewed a number of new features with the Windows 8.1 update, due to be
released in preview form on June 26. This version will come with a new Bluetooth
peer-to-peer protocol called Miracast, which allows devices to wirelessly send
video and screen images to another device, without the help of a router.
Miracast would provide an easy way to show PowerPoint presentations in a
conference, McDonald noted.
Windows 8.1 will also come with a new way to send documents to printers,
through use of NFC (near field communication). McDonald was the unfortunate
presenter this year to be plagued with the nonworking demonstration that always
seems to haunt keynotes, Microsoft’s in particular: He attempted, but was
unable, to show how the NFC printing would work.
But McDonald had plenty of other new Windows 8.1 features to share. It will
offer the ability for other devices to tether to a Windows 8.1 device’s Internet
connection. On the administration side, the live tiles on the new interface can
now be locked down by administrators, which can be handy for work computers with
fixed tasks. The company is preparing a Windows Embedded 8 Industry version,
which will offer additional administrative capabilities for workplace usage.
With the release of this Windows 8 update, Microsoft will also provide an
API (application programming interface) for third-party system and device
management software providers. It will allow developers to build VPN
connectivity directly into their applications, which will provide better
security for sensitive enterprise applications, as well as support of virtual
smart cards, also new with Windows 8.1.
Developer tools
With Visual Studio 2013, developers now can test their applications in the
cloud, using the same set of configurations they might have on-premises. Visual
Studio 2013 will also come with a feature called “Head’s Up Display,” according
to Microsoft technical fellow Brian Harry. “Head’s Up Display” provides a set of
in-line annotations for each block of code, showing when it was last modified,
and by whom, if it had passed the last round of testing, and other pertinent
bits of information.
Team Foundation Server 2013 will provide more information for development
project managers. It will offer a collaboration space where team members can
share notes. It will feature “hierarchical backlogs,” that offer detailed and
summarized views of how a project is progressing, including the backlog of
features, who is working on them and how the work is progressing.
Microsoft revealed a bit of acquisition news in the developer realm as
well. It is acquiring InCycle Software’s InRelease business unit, which provides
a way to manage developer workflows of creating new software from development to
production.
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