The document discusses a presentation given by Robert Jacobi of Arc Technology Group and Cory Fowler of Microsoft on how Joomla and Microsoft can have a successful open source partnership. They explain how Microsoft supports open source projects, the Azure cloud platform, and how Joomla can easily scale on Azure Web Apps. Benefits for the Joomla community include quick deployment, leveraging existing tools, and Microsoft's support for Joomla.
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How Joomla and Microsoft are a Great Open Source Success
1. How Joomla and Microsoft are a
Great Open Source Success
Robert Jacobi [Arc Technology Group]
Cory Fowler [Microsoft]
2. Agenda
Introductions
Microsoft Support for Open Source
What is Azure & Azure Websites?
Loft J for Azure
Scaling Joomla on Azure Websites
Q & A
3. Who are we?
3
Cory Fowler
Technical Evangelist
Microsoft Corporation
cfowler@microsoft.com
@SyntaxC4
Robert Jacobi
President
Arc Technology Group
robert.jacobi@arctg.com
@RobertJacobi
4. Arc Technology Group
4
• 14+ Years Custom Application Development
• 14+ Years Content Management
• Fortune 50 to Entrepreneurs
• Joomla! Focused
7. Microsoft + Arc Technology Group
• Expand availability of Microsoft solutions into Open
Source markets
•Adoption of Azure services
• Provide resources and support to Joomla community
7
8. Collaboration
• Joomla on Web App Gallery
• Loft J for Azure
• Joomla Project Features
• Joint Marketing
• Social Media
•Webcasts
• Events
8
17. Azure
footprint
16 regions worldwide in 2014
Data Centers
Regional Partners
18. Microsoft Azure Services
Client layer
(on-premises)
Tablet Phone
Games
PC console
On-premises
On-premises
service
Office Add-in Browser database
AD
Multifactor
Authentication
Access Control
Layer
Integration
layer
Service Bus CDN
BizTalk
Services
Traffic
Manager
Virtual
Networks
Express
Route
Application
layer
API Mgmt Websites
Cloud
Services VM
Mobile
Services
Media
Services
Notification
Hubs Scheduler Automation
Data Layer
Storage Blobs Tables Queues Data
Machine
Learning HD Insight
Backup and
Recovery
SQL
Database Caching StorSimple
19. Memory Optimized Disk Optimized
Portal
Puppet Chef Docker
Traffic Mgr
.NET Support2014
Powershell Automation
Remote Apps
Mobile Services
Offline Sync
Virtual Machines
SQL Database
.NET 4.5
Active GEO replication
Networking Visual Studio & .NET
Resource Manager
Point-to-site VPN Xamarin
Dynamic Routing
VSO GA
Web Sites
SMB File System
IBIZA
Remote Debug
VM Management
Powershell and DSC
Capture / Deploy
Autoscale
Subnet Routing
Static IP
Storage
Autoscale
Web Jobs
Backup
Java Support
ASP.NET MVC 5.1
ASP.NET Web API 2.1
AD support
Node.JS project support
Kindle Support
Remote Debugging
BD’s up to 500GB
99.95% SLA
Self Service Site Recovery
HDInsight
Hadoop 2.2
YARN support
.NET Foundation
Azure Redis Cache
API Management
Site Recovery
Cordova
VSO Open
Api’s
Event Hub
20. Azure is open across the stack
Ecosystem Provided
Languages, Dev
Tools & App
Containers
CMS & Apps
Devices
Databases
Management
MS Integrated
Operating
systems
38. Web Sites Service Architecture
Windows Azure
Load Balancer
Publish Endpoint Blob Storage
Runtime Database
Application Database
Frontend (IIS ARR)
API Endpoint
File Server
Metering
Deployment
Server(s)
39. Web Site
Monaco MSDeploy Build/Upload Your Own
Web Site Kudu Web Jobs
Public Site Extensions Private Site Extensions
Windows Azure Web Site
Gallery
Editor's Notes
Open Solutions Driving Business Success
Open source startup in Seattle
Add Jwc logo as well
Conferences
Attend/Present
Sponsor
Marketing
Investment
Financial
Technical
Resources
Testing
Timing: 2 minutes
Talking Points:
To support the open platform and productivity scenarios we just discussed, Microsoft works extensively with many open source communities. We have for a long time now.
More and more, customers, partners and the industry understand that the work we are doing with open source is about helping customers and enabling a rich and robust ecosystem of developers and partners. We enable open source on our platforms. We recognize that if we’re going to use open source, then we also have to give back, especially if we want open source developers to continue to think of our cloud services and devices as platforms for them to develop on.
We’re excited our momentum in working with open source communities and the scenarios we’re enabling for our mutual customers and partners:
With Microsoft Azure, there are 1,000 Linux virtual machines to choose from and Linux and various packages of Linux comprise 15% of the workloads.
Microsoft’s open source project community, Codeplex, now has more than one million members, more than tripling participation in the past few years.
Microsoft WebMatrix is a free, lightweight, cloud-connected web development tool that installs popular open source web apps with a few clicks. It’s been downloaded over a million times.
And customers as well as developers are benefitting directly from these efforts, including the more than 1,000 customers of the Microsoft-SUSE Alliance, which delivers interoperability solutions that help customers to get more out of their mixed Windows and Linux environments.
As I mentioned earlier, part of working with open source communities is giving back. With Hadoop, we’re committed 30,000 lines of code and over 10,000 engineering hours.
Robert speaks to this.
Support includes massive R&D.
Cloud is a priority.
Is this Loft J / blob storage, etc?
Tell story about Hilco this week getting 10x traffic burst for 12+ hours because of David James
"One of our clients had 1000% increase in traffic just this week!"