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Microsoft Azure Pass This restricted offer provides entitled customers with monetary credits to access Microsoft Azure at no charge. Flexibility with Azure Credits You receive Microsoft Azure monetary credits as entitled customers. Use up to your monthly Microsoft Azure credits at no charge. Any unused monthly credits cannot be carried over to subsequent months and cannot be transferred to other Azure subscriptions. Exclusions Azure Credits may not be used to purchase Azure support plans, third-party branded products, products sold through Marketplace or Store, or products otherwise sold separately from Azure (for example, Microsoft Azure Active Directory Premium). Payment Options Credit or debit cards only, unless previously approved for invoice. More details on pricing and billing can be found on our Pricing page. Cancelation Policy You may cancel this subscription at any time. Offer availability Usage Quotas The following monthly usage quotas are applied. Cloud Services and Virtual Machines Storage 150,000 objects

Use PowerShell to Create a Linux VM in Azure | Mike F Robbins In a couple of my previous blog articles, I’ve demonstrated how to create a storage account in Azure and how to create a reserved virtual IP address in Azure. Both of those items will be used in today’s blog article so I recommend reading through those previous blog articles if you haven’t already done so. The goal in this blog article is to build a CentOS based OpenLogic 7.0 VM in Azure except using PowerShell instead using the Azure portal website (GUI): First, the name of the image that Azure uses to build those VM’s will need to be determined. This can be accomplished using the Get-AzureVMImage cmdlet: Get-AzureVMImage | Where-Object ImageName -like *centos* | Select-Object -Property ImageName The last one in the previous set of results looks like the image that’s used to create the CentOS based OpenLogic 7.0 VM’s on Azure. Just to be sure, let’s take a look at the details of that particular image: Get-AzureVMImage -ImageName 5112500ae3b842c8b9c604889f8753c3__OpenLogic-CentOS-70-20150128

Virtual Network Documentation Explore Configure a Site-to-Site VPN using the Management Portal Wizard This tutorial walks you through the steps to create an Azure virtual network. Azure Virtual Network Overview Technical library guidance to help you get started with Virtual Network. Plan Azure Name Resolution Learn how to use this related technology to connect to virtual machines and role instances within a cloud service by hostname directly by using the name resolution service provided by Azure. Azure Schema Reference Documentation for the schema used in the network configuration file, which you use to specify Virtual Network configuration settings. Understand the basics of network security This white paper provides an overview of how to use the built-in and configurable security capabilities of Azure networking. Manage About Configuring a Virtual Network in the Management Portal This tutorial walks you through the steps to create a virtual network that connects to your company's network. Network Configuration Tasks

Desktop Hosting Reference Architecture & Deployment | Azure Updated: November 17, 2014 Summary: This document defines a set of architectural blocks for using Azure Virtual Machines to create multitenant, hosted Windows desktop and application services, referred to in this document as “desktop hosting.” The primary goal is to enable hosting providers to create secure, scalable, and reliable desktop hosting solution offers for small- and medium-sized organizations with up to 1,500 users. Updated: November 2014 Download: Download this guide now. Summary: This document provides procedural guidance for deploying a basic desktop hosting solution based on the Windows Azure Desktop Hosting Reference Architecture Guide. Download: Download this deployment guide now. Updated November 2014 Download: Download this guide now Summary: This document provides guidance for deploying a Remote Desktop Session Host (RDSH) farm to improve the availability and scale of a desktop hosting solution based on the Microsoft Azure Desktop Hosting Reference Architecture Guide.

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