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Microsoft rolls out new tech to connect its cloud to rivals


Microsoft Corp on Tuesday announced a new round of technologies aimed at making its cloud computing services work in data centers it does not own — including the cloud data centers of its rivals.


The strategy, Microsoft executives and analysts say, has been key to the company’s rise in the cloud computing infrastructure market, which research firm Gartner estimates hit $64.3 billion and where Microsoft is second only to market leader Amazon.com’s Amazon Web Services. Microsoft last week said revenue from Azure, its flagship cloud offering, grew 48 per cent, results that helped it overtake Apple Inc as the world’s most valuable publicly traded company.

Also read: Worldwide cloud services spend grew 35% to hit record $49.4 billion in Q3 2021: Report

Microsoft’s strategy has involved constructing its most lucrative cloud software services, such as database tools, so that they can run inside its own data centers, those owned by customers or even those of rivals like Amazon.

Microsoft’s cloud and artificial intelligence chief Scott Guthrie told Reuters that the move has persuaded some customers to use its services when they cannot always use Microsoft’s datacenters. Royal Bank of Canada, Guthrie said, faces legal requirements to keep some of its computing work in its own datacenters and uses a technology called Azure Arc to connect those facilities to Microsoft’s cloud.

“The challenge with higher-level services historically has been the concern of ‘lock in’ – what happens if I can only use them in your data center?” Guthrie said. “That freedom of movement causes customers to feel more comfortable using those services.”

Ed Anderson, a vice president distinguished analyst with Gartner, said the approach does open doors for Microsoft with customers, but it also forces the company to compete on the quality of its software services rather than by packaging them with cheap computing power.

“To be honest, that’s a better way to compete,” Anderson said. “Customers are suspicious of rhetoric. They look for evidence of capabilities and are cautious of things where inprinciple technology is multi-cloud but maybe the software licensing doesn’t support it.”



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