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Microsoft Dynamics ERP Moves to the Cloud on Windows Azure

Microsoft is unveiling yet another front in its intensive battle for the cloud, with the announcement at its Convergence 2011 conference that the next major releases of the company’s enterprise-resource planning applications will be running on the cloud-based Windows Azure platform. By positioning its Dynamics ERP offerings as a hosted service, Microsoft expands further beyond […]

Apr 12, 2011
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Microsoft is unveiling yet another front in its intensive battle for the cloud, with the announcement at its Convergence 2011 conference that the next major releases of the company’s enterprise-resource planning applications will be running on the cloud-based Windows Azure platform.

By positioning its Dynamics ERP offerings as a hosted service, Microsoft expands further beyond the on-premises solutions that comprise its traditional stable. The company is also using the Convergence conference in Atlanta to offer a glimpse of Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012, an ERP application whose beta is due this month, followed by a final release expected in August 2011.

Microsoft Dynamics AX 2012 includes Unified Natural Models, a library of business processes for real-world situations, and enhanced business intelligence capabilities for discovering fresh insights in data. The core ERP functions assist in financial, human resources and operations management.

Microsoft claims that its ERP applications due to migrate to the cloud will share the same functionality as the extant on-premises solutions. Microsoft Dynamics Marketplace will serve as a hub for services and cloud-based add-ons designed to help businesses meet their workflow needs.

At Convergence, Microsoft also announced general availability for Microsoft Dynamics SL 2011, its ERP solution for larger SMB (small to midsize business) projects, and that Microsoft Dynamics GP 2010 R2 will be available May 1.

Earlier this year, Microsoft released Dynamics CRM Online, a cloud competitor to similar offerings from the likes of Salesforce.com and Oracle. In trying to set its cloud products apart from its rivals’ platforms, Microsoft chooses to emphasize how customers who select its cloud option can leverage it in the context of other Microsoft software such as Office—in effect, creating a software-centric competitor to Oracle’s tightly integrated hardware-and-software stack. In the case of Dynamics CRM Online, Microsoft claims that integration imbues it with more functionality than Salesforce.com, whose own CRM concentrates more on real-time social networking.

For more, read the eWEEK article: Microsoft’s ERP Offerings Drifting to Windows Azure.

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