Microsoft has announced a limited public preview of the Microsoft Azure Intelligent Systems Service (ISS).
The new service is part of Redmond’s ongoing effort to target the Internet of Things (IoT).
This new Azure service helps customers embrace the Internet of Things and securely connect to, manage and capture machine-generated data from sensors and devices, regardless of the underlying operating system.
In an interview with eWEEK, Barb Edson, general manager of marketing for Windows Embedded at Microsoft, said Microsoft’s Windows Embedded team created the new Microsoft Azure Intelligent Systems Service, which features software agents to enable different devices to interact with the service.
“At the Build conference we committed to the Internet of Things and making Windows more accessible to smaller devices,” Edson said. “We understand that the Internet of Things is a heterogeneous world and that we’ll need to support any operating system. On the device side we have these software agents. The unique value is you have these software agents that sit on top of the operating system.”
“We built this service – both the cloud service and the agents on the device – to enable the connectivity and messaging to run between the device and the cloud service,” Edson told eWEEK. It sort of sounds like an updated page from Microsoft’s old Live Mesh strategy.
Microsoft announced its new cloud service at the company’s Accelerate Your Insights event in San Francisco on 15 April. The Intelligent Systems Service marks a critical expansion of the comprehensive Microsoft cloud-first data platform aimed at addressing some of the challenges facing enterprises, Edson said.
Moreover, Microsoft refers to the Internet of Your Things as “a fresh look at IoT that focuses on how companies can use the approach to gain new insights, optimise business processes, make more informed decisions, identify new revenue opportunities, and understand and predict customer and partner behaviours in ways they never thought possible,” Edson said in a blog post.
Essentially, Edson’s view of the Internet of Things is it is “the opportunity for businesses to connect data from devices and sensors with the cloud and business intelligence tools to gain new insights, optimize processes, identify new revenue opportunities and more,” she said in an 15 April blog post.
At the 15 April customer event in San Francisco, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella showcased innovations now available with the launch of SQL Server 2014 and outlined the company’s path to deliver a platform for ambient intelligence. Nadella stressed the importance of a data culture – one that encourages curiosity, action and experimentation – for everyone and every organisation. Microsoft also shared the results of new IDC research that shows companies that take a comprehensive approach to data stand to realize an additional 60 percent return on their data assets – a worldwide opportunity of $1.6 trillion (£956bn).
“The era of ambient intelligence has begun, and we are delivering a platform that allows companies of any size to create a data culture and ensure insights reach every individual in every organisation,” Nadella said, in a statement.
In a blog post, Nadella explained that, “When these devices around us gain the capacity to listen to us, respond to us, understand us and act on our behalf, we enter into an entirely new era. The era of ambient intelligence.”
In addition to the announcement of the Microsoft Azure Intelligent Systems Service and the launch of SQL Server 2014, Microsoft also announced the general availability of the Analytics Platform System (APS). The APS combines the best of Microsoft’s SQL Server database and Hadoop technology in one low-cost offering that delivers “big data in a box,” Microsoft said.
These new solutions build on 12 months of innovation – including Power BI for Office 365, a cloud-based, self-service business intelligence solution with natural language capability; Azure HDInsight for elastic Hadoop in the cloud; PolyBase to bring structured and unstructured data together in a data warehouse appliance; and Power Query for Excel, which makes it easier for people to discover data – to deliver a comprehensive data platform with real-time performance built into everything.
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Originally published on eWeek.
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