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Microsoft announced on Monday that its Azure Sphere solutions for Internet of Things (IoT) devices have reached the "general availability" (GA) commercial-release stage. It's been almost two years ...
The launch of Azure IoT Edge was one of Microsoft's slightly more esoteric but interesting announcements at its Build developer conference in Seattle today. While "the cloud" is all about moving ...
Microsoft also today announced that the Azure IoT platform will now support Google’s Android and Android Things platform via its Java SDK. What’s more interesting, though, is the new services.
Announces integration with Microsoft Azure IoT enabling developers to automatically authenticate devices to Azure’s IoT cloud platform May 06, 2019 03:00 PM Eastern Daylight Time ...
Image: ML Azure IoT Hub, Microsoft's communications platform for billions of cloud connected devices, has moved to general availability. The Azure messaging hub for Internet of Things (IoT) is a ...
Also as part of this announcement, Microsoft released a major update to Azure IoT Central, its IoT app platform. Some of the updates include IoT plug-and-play support (announced in May), expanded API ...
Instead of developing its own IoT starter kit, Microsoft is working with MXChip to deliver a low-cost Arduino-compatible board that can work directly with Azure’s IoT tools.
Microsoft's introduced features for Azure IoT customers include the usage of spatial analytics with Azure Maps, with better information and insights about their "things" and where actions are needed.
Recently Microsoft announced the public preview of Azure IoT Edge for Linux on Windows, also known as EFLOW. With EFLOW, customers run production Linux-based cloud-native workloads on Windows IoT.
Microsoft already offers a platform-as-a-service IoT product for Azure customers who would prefer to do more of the work themselves, but this new service eliminates a lot of that heavy lifting.
Microsoft has announced the general availability of Azure IoT Central, a software as a service solution for working with the internet of things. With Azure IoT Central, Microsoft envisions a low-code ...
Microsoft announced a preview of Azure IoT Edge for Linux on Windows, which lets organizations tap Linux virtual machine processes that also work with Windows- and Azure-based processes and services.