Overview
What is Azure Virtual Machines?
Virtual Machines (VMs) are available on Microsoft Azure, providing what is built as a low-cost, per-second compute service, available via Windows or Linux.
There is only one choice for hosting Windows servers in the cloud
Azure VMs offer flexibility beyond competition
Let's talk about VMs
Databricks on Azure VMs
Opens the door to cloud computing
Straight forward to setup and deploy your application server. Excellent support from Microsoft
On-demand availability to resources and pay-as-you-go solution
Azure Virtual Machines
Azure VMs are good value for money
- Isolated development machines for working with Azure cloud services.
- Hosting Jenkins master …
Virtual Provision for better performance
The business problems the product addresses are many.
Some of …
My Honest Review of Azure Virtual Machines.
A perfect setup for easy availability
Suites very well with my CoE practice needs, flexible and compatible
Azure Virtual Machines, quick win
Awards
Products that are considered exceptional by their customers based on a variety of criteria win TrustRadius awards. Learn more about the types of TrustRadius awards to make the best purchase decision. More about TrustRadius Awards
Popular Features
- Virtual machine automated provisioning (23)9.090%
- Live virtual machine backup (19)9.090%
- Live virtual machine migration (16)8.585%
- Management console (21)8.080%
Reviewer Pros & Cons
Pricing
3 Year Reserved - Burstable VMs - B1S
$0.0038
Spot - General Purpose - Av2
$0.005
1 Year Reserved - Burstable VMs - B1S
$0.0059
Entry-level set up fee?
- No setup fee
Offerings
- Free Trial
- Free/Freemium Version
- Premium Consulting/Integration Services
Features
Server Virtualization
Server virtualization allows multiple operating systems to be run completely independently on a single server
- 9Virtual machine automated provisioning(23) Ratings
Automation of virtual machine provisioning through use of vm templates
- 8Management console(21) Ratings
Management console for central administration of vm environment
- 9Live virtual machine backup(19) Ratings
Ability to backup vms without interrupting service
- 8.5Live virtual machine migration(16) Ratings
Downtime minimization by migrating live vms between hosts and across clusters
- 8.5Hypervisor-level security(16) Ratings
Hypervisor-level security including antivirus and anti-malware
Product Details
- About
- Tech Details
- FAQs
What is Azure Virtual Machines?
Azure Virtual Machines Technical Details
Deployment Types | Software as a Service (SaaS), Cloud, or Web-Based |
---|---|
Operating Systems | Unspecified |
Mobile Application | No |
Frequently Asked Questions
Comparisons
Compare with
Reviews and Ratings
(88)Attribute Ratings
Reviews
(1-7 of 7)Let's talk about VMs
- Many presets are available when spinning up a new instances to match you workload, instead of having to start from scratch
- VM Scale sets makes it really easy to scale in & out the VMs easily
- When getting started, no need to manage a networking layer before starting a new instance, no need for any VPC complexitites, as Azure handles it.
- VM Firewall and security rules can be managed directly from the Azure interface
- Slightly more expensive that other cloud provider VMs
- The spin up time is a little longer as well. Even a few seconds count when you need to scale up quickly
- Lacking choices when choosing Linux based OS images
Databricks on Azure VMs
- Rapid Scalability
- Variety of elastic storage options
- Flexibility and control for app deployment
- Regular Updates for security and feature upgrades
- Fault tolerance
- Native Integration with Databricks
- Pricing can be a bit better
- Compute types can be increased (AWS EC2 has more)
- No Bare metal GPU instances as in OCI
- Always available and on-demand support.
- Scalable and flexible product.
- Easy to configure and install.
- Customizing advanced setting is not easy to beginners.
- Moving multiple data is not easy for starters.
- Feedback collection from many sources is not also easy from the start.
Azure VMs are good value for money
- Isolated development machines for working with Azure cloud services.
- Hosting Jenkins master server used to deploy our Azure-based applications.
- Hosting Jenkins agents for CI/CD pipelines which are built on separate VNETs for dev, test, sim, and prod.
- Azure Data Factory integration runtime to run ADF pipelines.
- Very easy to spin up.
- Low amount of maintenance.
- Low cost when using reserved instances.
- Flexible in terms of supported OSs.
- Additional security risk that needs to be managed.
- Complexity to make replicas of a VM.
- Potentially build and forget in larger enterprises which will drain money.
Virtual Provision for better performance
The business problems the product addresses are many.
Some of them are:
1. Testing the applications on cross platforms. It is basically testing whether the software works in all the operating systems.
2. Automatic allotment of virtual machines based on the traffic encountered.
- Provisioning
- Scaling
- Faster deployment
- Swapping of OS disks is a bit difficult.
- More features can be introduced for low size VMs.
Why Azure Cloud Virtual Machines just is.
- When demand is high, we scale the service out, eg During a Football Match.
- When a football match is over and the throughput of data from OPTA drops we save by the service scaling back in.
- Our App Service Plans along with the Clean C# code are lightening fast giving a good customer experience.
- When producing the TV Guide information and a program overruns its scheduled time, a client can instantly be updated to the new programming schedule as our change is instant and its in the right place for all the clients to download and adjust their television guides appropriately to send out to the public giving a 24x7 uptime service that is precise and accurate and resilient to outages due to failover zones around the world.
- Support on VMs doing strange things around NETUSE as a command resulted in constantly being sent over to INDIA where personally I found a real Language Barrier and even after specifically expressing a support service in the UK or the US it did keep finding its way back to a company called MINDTREE, the language barrier was such that after 4 or 5 meetings I was been asked the same questions that I was asked in the initial day 1 meeting and round and round it went, this issue was never resolved, we had to write code and utilize a different workaround to get over having to use the NETUSE command which previous to a VM running Windows server 2019 Datacentre worked fine.
- Azure Pricing could be more competitive to AWS.
- Having the ability to control app service plans which at the minute are just something that exists and we are not able to really see what they are doing which becomes an issue when you want to try and bug fix an issue.
We use it for football, horse racing, Olympics games etc, it is also used when things happen in the world like right now there is a lot of concern over the Russia and Ukraine conflict, since the demand for this information is high we instantly scale to meet the demand of our news feed services. I believe up to 90% of the UK's News, sports and media information actually passes through our computer systems, we are a market leading news and information service and Azure Virtual Machines provide us with the reliability that we need so that we can provide a rock solid reliable news and information service to the world.
Azure VM interface is really intuitive and easy to use.
- Easy and fast to build.
- A lot of features to manage and expand the VMs.
- Intuitive UI makes you learn fast.
- To swap an OS disk has some requirements, so not all disks are available to easily swap.
- Would be good if the public IP assignments were fixed and would not change over time, by default.
- Nothing else i can think of.