Microsoft Competes for the Web 2.0 Backbone

A lot of the web 2.0 infrastructure runs on servers provided by Amazon Web Services – and no wonder, because the combination of no up-front costs and pay-as-you-go pricing is very attractive when you’re a struggling company with no capital. Now it looks like Microsoft has decided they need to take some of this business away from Amazon. They’ve recently announced the launch of Microsoft SQL Server Data Services which, despite the name, is not a version of SQL Server but another way (now in open beta) to store data “in the cloud.”

SQL Server Data Services promises a business-class SLA, REST and ROAP interfaces with a supporting C# client library, and geo-redundant replicated copies of your data. So far, pricing does not seem to have been announced. Still, with the lack of an equivalent on-demand CPU service in the same data center, and the predilection of the current crop of startups for non-Microsoft software, it seems unlikely to pose an immediate threat to Amazon’s business. But Microsoft has a great talent for sticking with a business and improving, so this is one to watch for the future.

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