Microsoft Azure Expands Into Canada, South Korea

Microsoft is investing $15 billion to establish the Azure Cloud as a worldwide presence. Canada and South Korea are part of its expansion roadmap.



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Microsoft has expanded its Azure Cloud into South Korea and made it generally available in Canada with expanded data center locations in Toronto and Quebec City.

The latter move gives it an edge over Amazon north of the border because of Canada's data privacy restrictions against storing its citizens' data in the US. Canada may prove a new field of competition for cloud providers. On its world infrastructure map, Amazon lists a Montreal cloud data center as "coming soon." It will also soon add data centers near Columbus, Ohio.

Microsoft Canada president Janet Kennedy announced the expansion May 10 and noted the added Azure data centers will allow healthcare data on Canadian citizens to reside on a cloud service without risking violation of Canada's data privacy laws. Office 365 Online applications will be served from the Canadian data centers, allowing them to collect and store citizens' data as well.

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The two Canadian data centers give customers the assurance of a data failover site that maintains "data residency." It's still inside Canada, Kennedy said in the announcement. Database systems and other large data repositories can also have a backup and recovery site that meets the same criteria.

Microsoft's cloud-based customer relationship management software, Dynamics CRM Online, will be available in the Canadian data centers in the third quarter.

[Want to learn more about Dynamics apps on Azure? Read Microsoft Dynamics AX Launches on Azure Worldwide.]

Azure ExpressRoute, which offers private-line, high-speed access to an Azure data center, is also available through Bell Business Markets, a Canadian telecommunications provider based in Montreal. Both Microsoft ExpressRoute and Bell's own Bell Cloud Connect supply access to services on Azure over a dedicated high-speed line instead of the public Internet.

Microsoft corporate vice president Takeshi Numoto wrote in a blog May 10 that Microsoft now offers Azure services as generally available in 24 regions around the world and announced 6 more. The general availability of Canadian service and the announcement of South Korean service are part of the $15 billion Microsoft has spent to establish the Azure Cloud as a worldwide presence, Numoto wrote.

"We are excited to be taking advantage of the newly opened Microsoft Canadian data center where we will begin moving more than 35,000 users to the Microsoft Canadian cloud," Labi Kousoulis, minister for Internal Services for the Province of Nova Scotia, was quoted as saying in Numoto's blog.

In the US, Microsoft operates Azure data centers in San Antonio; Des Moines, Iowa; Chicago; Quincy, Wash.; Cheyenne, Wyo.; and Boydton, Va. In Europe, it operates centers in Dublin and Amsterdam. In Asia, it has centers in Hong Kong, Japan, Australia, and China. It also operates centers in Brazil. It lists more than 100 data center locations supporting its Azure and online services. The company says these sites are both built and owned by Microsoft and leased from other owners.

The data center announced for South Korea will be located in Seoul. It's likely another will be announced, since Microsoft tries to build paired data centers when it launches in a new region: One serves as a backup site for the other.

"The new regions "will feature the same industry-leading levels of security, privacy and control, compliance, and transparency" as Azure in the US, Numoto wrote.

Google, IBM, Amazon Web Services, and Microsoft each count their number of data centers a little differently.

Amazon also lists availability zones within a region, each one in effect representing the equivalent of an independently functioning data center with its own power and communication. While its data center used the most, US East in Ashburn, Va., might be counted singly by competitors, it has five availability zones, and amounts to a data center complex.

Charles Babcock is an editor-at-large for InformationWeek and author of Management Strategies for the Cloud Revolution, a McGraw-Hill book. He is the former editor-in-chief of Digital News, former software editor of Computerworld and former technology editor of Interactive ... View Full Bio

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