Site icon MacDailyNews

Microsoft names their cloud computing product after a cloudless sky: Windows Azure

“Microsoft on Monday announced a version of Windows that runs over the Internet from inside Microsoft’s own data centers,” Ina Fried reports for CNET.

MacDailyNews Take: Oh, boy. That sounds like it’ll work just wonderfully! Shudder.

Freid continues, “Dubbed Windows Azure, it’s less a replacement for the operating system that runs on one’s own PC than it is an alternative for developers, intended to let them write programs that live inside Microsoft’s data centers as opposed to on the servers of a given business.”

MacDailyNews Take: Microsoft Azure. For all the data you really don’t mind losing.

Freid continues, “The company itself plans to offer businesses the option of running over the Internet the kinds of software that have traditionally run on a company’s own servers. Microsoft already sells its Exchange corporate e-mail software in this way, but that is just the beginning, said Microsoft vice president Dave Thompson.”

Full article here.

[Thanks to MacDailyNews Reader “HMCIV” for the heads up.]

From Apple Mac OS X Leopard’s built-in systemwide New Oxford American Dictionary:

   azure:
   az•ure |ˈa zh ər|
   adjective
   bright blue in color, like a cloudless sky…

   noun
   a bright blue color.
    • poetic/literary the clear sky.

Only Microsoft would name their cloud computing product after a cloudless sky.

However, when you think about it, Microsoft’s calling it “Azure” does actually make perfect sense: Windows users would hope to connect to Microsoft’s cloud, but there would no cloud available, so all they’d see would be nothing but a blue screen. As usual.

Exit mobile version