Microsoft today announced that its Azure IoT Hub — a cloud service for registering, managing, and communicating with Internet-connected devices — will become generally available tomorrow, February 4.
Azure IoT Hub is a big part of Azure IoT Suite, a bundle of products that can be used to build and run applications that integrate with connected devices. And because of that, the release of Azure IoT Hub is a big deal for the Internet of Things (IoT) strategy of Microsoft as a whole. Azure IoT Hub became available in public preview in October, but the service was not included in the launch of the Azure IoT Suite.
“IoT Hub is the bridge between customers’ devices and their solutions in the cloud, allowing them to store, analyze and act on that data in real time,” Sam George, partner director for Azure IoT at Microsoft, wrote in a blog post today. George notes that the service can be hooked up to other Azure services, such as Azure Machine Learning and Azure Stream Analytics.
The announcement of general availability for the service comes on the same day that Cisco announced that it’s acquiring Jasper Technologies, a company with a cloud service for IoT devices, for a sum of $1.4 billion. But Cisco, even with its burgeoning Intercloud, is known less as a public cloud provider and more as a data center hardware provider.
June 5th: The AI Audit in NYC
Join us next week in NYC to engage with top executive leaders, delving into strategies for auditing AI models to ensure fairness, optimal performance, and ethical compliance across diverse organizations. Secure your attendance for this exclusive invite-only event.
In the cloud infrastructure market, Amazon Web Services (AWS) is No. 1, and it released its AWS IoT service out of beta in December. Google Cloud Platform does not have a dedicated IoT service.