Jaa


Microsoft Aurora, the small business hybrid cloud server is available

Three months after Microsoft’s “Aurora” hybrid cloud/on-premises server for small business was released to manufacturing, the product is available via a variety of channels.

Here’s some additional information from a Microsoft spokesperson regarding the Office 365 capabilities of Aurora:

“Office 365 and SBS 2011 Essentials do work together currently. Right now, you can run the core infrastructure you need on-premise and work with online services such as O365 for collaboration and line of business (LOB) application support. The difference coming this fall is that the Office 365 Integration Module for SBS Essentials will be available. This module will provide customers with additional functionality to combine these two products without increasing complexity.”

Aurora was designed to be an on-premises Server Core, supplemented by Office 365 and other still-unspecified Microsoft cloud products. (Windows Intune or Dynamics CRM Online could be possible other cloud add-ons, I’d think.)

Add-ins will be able to be online, on-premise, or a mixture of both, according to the company. The two add-on options for the product:

  • Online Service Add-in - Software that integrates Essentials functionality with a hosted online service, e.g., Cloud backup, Office 365, Hosted Email, Online CRM, etc.
  • On-premise Add-in - Software that enhances the intranet functionality of Essentials, e.g., Server Power Management tools, Security & Group Policy, Anti-Malware, etc.

Microsoft is positioning Aurora as suited for small businesses of up to 25 users). “It can seamlessly integrate into online services such as Office 365, cloud backup, and cloud management solutions,” according to a product data sheet. Cloud and on-premises roducts from third-party software/services vendors also can integrate with Aurora.

Comments

  • Anonymous
    July 11, 2011
    Eucalyptus Systems also has a hybrid solution for small-to-large business cloud. There are over 25,000 clouds already launched using the software. It integrates "seamlessly" with Amazon Web Services and provides a standard, RESTful API for dynamic provisioning of infrastructure-as-a-service. Many virtual and paravirtual hypervisors are also supported for hosting a myriad of guest operating systems.