Everything You Need to Know About Azure Infrastructure – November 2020 Edition
with 1 Comment by Aidan Finn
November has come and gone but for those looking to catch-up on Azure, here's what you need to know.
with 1 Comment by Aidan Finn
November has come and gone but for those looking to catch-up on Azure, here's what you need to know.
by Aidan Finn
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?
by Aidan Finn
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.
by Aidan Finn
The half-year point has passed meaning that Azure (and Windows/Windows Server) are into a new planning & development cycle.
by Aidan Finn
As we approach Build, Microsoft is ramping up the Azure announcements; here's everything that happened last month.
by Aidan Finn
Septemeber was full of Azure announcements from Ignite, Aidan breaks all the news down so that it is easier to digest.
by Aidan Finn
There was quite a bit of networking news from Ignite and Aidan breaks it down for you to digest.
by Aidan Finn
We’re entering the laid-back days of Summer. There isn’t much Azure IaaS news, but we’re after quality, not quantity. June was a good news month for those of us using Microsoft Azure.
by Aidan Finn
I predicted that the Build conference would give us lots of Azure news. In one respect, I was right; there was lots of news.
by Aidan Finn
We’re just a few weeks away from the Microsoft Build conference, where historically, a lot of announcements are made.
by Aidan Finn
Aidan Finn explains how app services, or web apps, can be connected to external users or services.
by Aidan Finn
Aidan Finn describes the many networking announcements that were made at Microsoft Ignite 2017.
by Aidan Finn
Server administrators are going to be responsible for much of the networking that was not formerly in their scope. Azure Network Watcher is a great tool to help monitor and troubleshoot your network deployments.
by Aidan Finn
Microsoft recently announced further expansion of the number of Azure regions (datacenter locations) and ExpressRoute (WAN) points of presence around the world. New Regions In the parlance of Microsoft Azure, a region is a geographic location with one or more data centers that Microsoft uses to run the Azure public cloud. When you deploy something… Read More
by Aidan Finn
In this article Aidan Finn discusses the most forgotten aspect of migrating or deploying services into the cloud: Exactly how will the users connect to the services that will be running in Azure?