November has come and gone but for those looking to catch-up on Azure, here's what you need to know.
October, the first month in Q4 of the calendar year and Q2 of the Microsoft financial year, is also in the middle of planning for the next semester of development of Microsoft Azure (codenamed Cobalt).
September was Ignite month – I will get to that in a moment. That means there should be lots of news. And this should be a post full of Azure announcements. But will it be?
June 2020 marks the end of Vibranium and the start of Manganese, the codenames for the ending and starting half-year semesters in the Azure development year.
At times like this, chatting about cool new features in Azure is a lot less important than what’s surrounding us all, and impacting some of us either directly or indirectly, now. But you know what? A distraction from the fear, worry, or self-imposed incarceration can be a good thing. So let’s crack on with it, and let’s talk about the cool new IaaS features that Azure launched during the last month.
We are now in the middle of the second Azure (and Windows) semester of 2019. Planning for the first semester of 2020 is underway. And now we are just over 1 month away from Ignite, the week that is usually an explosion of announcements for Microsoft’s enterprise products.
The half-year point has passed meaning that Azure (and Windows/Windows Server) are into a new planning & development cycle.
It may be the middle of Summer but there is a lot going on with Azure, this is what you need to know about Azure for the month of July.
During May, the month was filled with Azure announcements, here are the key items that you need to know about.
It was another busy month for Azure, here’s a wrap-up of what you need to know for January.