Cloud Zone is brought to you in partnership with:

Troy Hunt is a Software Architect and Microsoft MVP for Developer Security. He blogs regularly about security principles in software development at troyhunt.com and is the author of the OWASP Top 10 for .NET developers series and free eBook of the same name. Troy is also the creator of the recently released Automated Security Analyser for ASP.NET Websites at asafaweb.com. Troy is a DZone MVB and is not an employee of DZone and has posted 36 posts at DZone. You can read more from them at their website. View Full User Profile

Guess What? Not all .NET Roads Lead to Microsoft

06.27.2012
| 1930 views |
  • submit to reddit

Strangely enough, there are time when I talk about things that aren’t directly related to security and yesterday’s guest appearance on the Uhuru podcast was one of these. In fact “the cloud” is something I’m deeply interested in and have spent a lot of time thinking about and working with lately, one significant of example of which has been the use of AppHarbor for hosting ASafaWeb.

Yesterday I had a short chat to Michael Surkan from Uhuru Software on how I was adapting to the new world cloud order and particularly what I like about the AppHarbor offering. I’d had some involvement with the Azure in the very early days and made the decision to choose AppHarbor about a year back so hopefully those timeframes put some of my comments in context (but I’m sure people more knowledgeable about Azure than me will call me on the inevitable mistakes in what I said!). This is now up on the Uhuru website:

Listen: Not all .NET roads lead to Microsoft 

We had a good chat offline afterwards and one thing that really stuck out is the number of players entering the cloud market and the different angles they’re approaching IaaS / PaaS / SaaS from. It’s great news for those of us on the development side as we can choose from a much broader range of app hosting models than we ever had access to before. Offerings such as Azure are a very different paradigm to the likes of AppHarbor which is very different again to what you get from the Amazon offerings. Good times to be a developer!

Published at DZone with permission of Troy Hunt, author and DZone MVB. (source)

(Note: Opinions expressed in this article and its replies are the opinions of their respective authors and not those of DZone, Inc.)