Brian WatsonBrian Watson

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      There are at least three ways to enable e-mail for your Azure applications:

      1.Using a custom on-premise Email Forwarder Service.

      2. Using Email Server’s Web Services APIs

      3.Using a third party SMTP Service

      All are described in more depth here: http://blogs.msdn.com/b/windowsazure/archive/2010/10/08/adoption-program-insights-sending-emails-from-windows-azure-part-1-of-2.aspx?wa=wsignin1.0

      Please help us understand what scenarios (if any) these patterns don’t address for your applications.

      Brian WatsonBrian Watson gave this 3 votes  · 
    • 2,722 votes
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        At PDC 2010 Microsoft announced the Extra Small Instance, which will be priced at $0.05 per compute hour in order to make the process of development, testing and trial easier. This will make it affordable for developers interested in running smaller applications on the platform. A beta of this role will be available before the end of 2010.

        Please let us know if this addresses your needs for a more cost effective Azure offering.

        Brian WatsonBrian Watson gave this 3 votes  · 
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          We’re working on ways to provide free and low cost onramps for developers, and expect to make more announcements in 2011. Today, there are already multiple ways for developers to get onto Azure cost effectively:

          Free Introductory Offer – provides a limited monthly quota of Azure resources at no cost, with standard rates applying above those thresholds: http://www.microsoft.com/windowsazure/offers/

          MSDN Premium, Ultimate, and BizSpark Subscription Benefit – provides significantly higher free quotas of Azure resources to MSDN subscribers for several months: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/subscriptions/ee461076.aspx

          Cloud Essentials for Partners – provides free/low cost access to Azure resources to members of the Microsoft Partner Network. http://www.microsoftcloudpartner.com/

          Brian WatsonBrian Watson commented  · 

          Hi Harris
          I agree with Steven Nagy. It is great for partners who tend to be large companies who could probably aford to pay. It is the independent developer, student, self-employed etc. who need free access if they are to use Azure rather than Google.

          Brian WatsonBrian Watson gave this 3 votes  · 

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