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        Azure Site Recovery Now Handles VMware Workloads
        Microsoft pitches it as a "unified solution for workload-aware disaster recovery."
        
        
        
Microsoft has added VMware to the types of workloads that its Azure  Site Recovery service can handle. 
That was one in a series of services that reached general availability (GA) on Azure this month.
The GA status signifies that the services are considered  commercially viable by Microsoft, and they are backed by service level  agreements. Most of the GA announcements were made late last week.
General Availability Status
The Azure Site Recovery service had been available, but now it  commercially supports VMware workloads, in addition to Hyper-V ones. The  ability to replicate  VMware workloads and physical machines to Microsoft Azure infrastructure is  now at the GA status with the Azure Site Recovery service. Microsoft sees this  service as being used by organizations to add disaster recovery protections or  to facilitate dev-test operations. Users can conduct disaster recovery drills  and they can scale up their disaster recovery setups. The service also supports  "automated VMware vCenter Server discovery," according to Microsoft's  announcement.
Another Azure resource that hit the GA status is a new Linux  Remote Direct Memory Access option for running memory-intensive compute  applications on Linux servers. Linux RDMA extends the processing across two  servers or virtual machines in Azure, according to Microsoft's announcement. It's  available with Azure's A8 and A9 virtual machine sizes, and offers "near 'bare  metal' performance of less than 3 microsecond latency and greater than 3.5 Gbps  bandwidth," according to Microsoft's announcement. SUSE Linux Enterprise  Server 12 is currently supported by the Linux RDMA option, and an integrated  image is currently available in the Azure Marketplace. However, Microsoft is  also working with other Linux server distributors on adding a Linux RDMA option.
The Azure  Batch service is now at GA status. This service lets developers run  parallel compute-intensive workloads without having to maintain the underlying infrastructure.  The service can automatically scale up or scale down workloads across  "thousands of virtual machines," according to Microsoft's  announcement, with management carried out through the Azure  portal. With the GA release, Microsoft won't charge for Azure Batch's "resource  management and job scheduling capabilities." Instead, users pay for the  compute resources they use. Some aspects of the service are at the preview  stage, though. For instance, Microsoft has introduced new REST-based  API previews that unify the namespaces used with Batch and Batch Apps.  Also, "job splitter" and "task process" Batch Apps  capabilities are still at preview. 
Preview Status
On top of the Azure GA news, Microsoft announced a preview  of Azure Data Catalog, which is available today. It's a metadata system  designed to communicate the value of data sources in organizations. Analysts  and data scientists typically might specify the object names, attribute names  and data types associated with the data source using the Azure Data Catalog  service, providing a means for others to search for the information. The Azure  Data Catalog requires having an Azure Active Directory subscription and needs  to be set up initially by the account administrator or a coadministrator,  according to Microsoft's "getting  started" information. 
Another preview release is Apache  Spark for Azure HDInsight. Azure HDInsight is Microsoft's Big Data service  offering, while Apache Spark is an open source processing framework for  speeding up data analytics. Microsoft sees Apache Spark being used with Azure  HDInsight to build more interactive queries of unstructured data. Microsoft's  Power BI service, which will hit GA status on July 24, will come with  connectors to Apache Spark.
Today, at its Worldwide Partner Conference, Microsoft  announced the Cortana  Analytics Suite. It combines various Big Data services in Azure, along with  Machine Learning, Bing search and Cortana speech-recognition capabilities, plus  visual recognition capabilities. It's not yet at GA status. Rob Helm, managing  vice president at independent consultancy Directions on Microsoft, described the Cortana Analytics Suite as a "new brand for Microsoft machine learning  and Big Data services."
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.