News

Microsoft Cuts Cost of Using SQL in the Cloud

Latest cuts are seen as a response to reductions in Amazon cloud offerings.

Developers who want to use the cloud in their environments will find Microsoft's version cheaper now.

It's part of a series of cuts to entice potential customers to check out Windows Azure.

Microsoft announced a Windows Azure price decrease last week for its SQL Reporting Services, which is used for business intelligence-type applications.

The price decrease comes in association with a lower report increment. The SQL Reporting Service is now measured at increments of 30 reports at $0.16 per hour. The previous charge was measured at $0.88 per hour in increments of 200 reports. Microsoft claims that "the smaller report increment (from 200 to 30) will give customers better utilization and hence lower effective price points," according to a blog post.

That's a bit abstract and hard to follow, perhaps, but so is the entire pricing structure for Windows Azure. Organizations buying time on Windows Azure pay a monthly rate based on their use of various Windows Azure components. They pay for the compute time, data storage and data access, plus the bandwidth of the data transferred out of the cloud. Those various services get priced at specific rates, usually per GB. There's also a monthly fee rolled into the overall cost if an organization uses SQL Azure.

In December, Microsoft announced price reductions for Windows Azure Storage, claiming that costs could be reduced "by as much as 28%." The company offers geo-replication storage support, as well as lower cost locally redundant storage support as part of Windows Azure Storage. The geo-replication storage service is turned on by default. While that may sound good, Microsoft avoided using its own georedundant storage to address a two-day Windows Azure service disruption in late December because doing so would have lost some data for customers. The company indicated that it is working on engineering a faster response time for its georeplication service.

The price cuts are part of a series. Microsoft eliminated an inbound data transfer charge during peak hours back in June. In September, the company rolled out a plan to offer discounts based on spending tiers.

These price reductions appear to be responses to the competition, particularly Amazon Elastic Cloud Compute (EC2) and Amazon Web Services (AWS). Amazon announced earlier this month that it had lowered data transfer prices between AWS regions by as much as 83 percent. In addition, Amazon decreased some EC2 on-demand prices by up to 13 percent.

About the Author

Kurt Mackie is senior news producer for 1105 Media's Converge360 group.

comments powered by Disqus

Featured

  • Hands On: New VS Code Insiders Build Creates Web Page from Image in Seconds

    New Vision support with GitHub Copilot in the latest Visual Studio Code Insiders build takes a user-supplied mockup image and creates a web page from it in seconds, handling all the HTML and CSS.

  • Naive Bayes Regression Using C#

    Dr. James McCaffrey from Microsoft Research presents a complete end-to-end demonstration of the naive Bayes regression technique, where the goal is to predict a single numeric value. Compared to other machine learning regression techniques, naive Bayes regression is usually less accurate, but is simple, easy to implement and customize, works on both large and small datasets, is highly interpretable, and doesn't require tuning any hyperparameters.

  • VS Code Copilot Previews New GPT-4o AI Code Completion Model

    The 4o upgrade includes additional training on more than 275,000 high-quality public repositories in over 30 popular programming languages, said Microsoft-owned GitHub, which created the original "AI pair programmer" years ago.

  • Microsoft's Rust Embrace Continues with Azure SDK Beta

    "Rust's strong type system and ownership model help prevent common programming errors such as null pointer dereferencing and buffer overflows, leading to more secure and stable code."

  • Xcode IDE from Microsoft Archrival Apple Gets Copilot AI

    Just after expanding the reach of its Copilot AI coding assistant to the open-source Eclipse IDE, Microsoft showcased how it's going even further, providing details about a preview version for the Xcode IDE from archrival Apple.

Subscribe on YouTube

Upcoming Training Events