Book Image

Azure Integration Guide for Business

By : Joshua Garverick, Jack Lee, Mélony Qin, Trevoir Williams
Book Image

Azure Integration Guide for Business

By: Joshua Garverick, Jack Lee, Mélony Qin, Trevoir Williams

Overview of this book

Azure Integration Guide for Business is essential for decision makers planning to transform their business with Microsoft Azure. The Microsoft Azure cloud platform can improve the availability, scalability, and cost-efficiency of any business. The guidance in this book will help decision makers gain valuable insights into proactively managing their applications and infrastructure. You'll learn to apply best practices in Azure Virtual Network and Azure Storage design, ensuring an efficient and secure cloud infrastructure. You'll also discover how to automate Azure through Infrastructure as Code (IaC) and leverage various Azure services to support OLTP applications. Next, you’ll explore how to implement Azure offerings for event-driven architectural solutions and serverless applications. Additionally, you’ll gain in-depth knowledge on how to develop an automated, secure, and scalable solutions. Core elements of the Azure ecosystem will be discussed in the final chapters of the book, such as big data solutions, cost governance, and best practices to help you optimize your business. By the end of this book, you’ll understand what a well-architected Azure solution looks like and how to lead your organization toward a tailored Azure solution that meets your business needs.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Summary

In this chapter, you gained an understanding of the application architecture for creating big data and intelligent solutions using Azure technologies. Azure provides several services and integrations that assist in developing big data pipelines that can ingest data in various forms and from different sources, consolidate the data, and ultimately convert it into a more acceptable form for human consumption. We can then build dashboards and visualizations using powerful tools, such as Power BI.

We then must consider that data might not always be from static sources, such as databases or files, but it might come in varied volumes and velocities from smart devices. These devices can send data based on different parameters, and the data might not be standardized or structured. In this case, we use IoT solutions and messaging systems to handle and react to the incoming event data from these devices.

After figuring out how to collate and aggregate big data, we need to apply...