Microsoft and Pivotal have partnered to bring managed infrastructure for Spring Boot Java apps to Microsoft’s Azure cloud. The managed service, now in private preview, is called the Azure Spring Cloud ...
Microsoft has teamed up with Pivotal Software to launch a private preview of Azure Spring Cloud, seeking to ease the development of Java-based cloud microservices. The idea is to help developers focus ...
Pivotal Software and Microsoft introduced a private preview of Azure Spring Cloud on Tuesday. Azure Spring Cloud is a service for developers of Spring Boot-based Java applications that promises to ...
Microsoft continued to beef up its support for Java developers in both the cloud and its popular, open source, cross-platform code editor, Visual Studio Code (VS Code), with new updates to Azure ...
Microsoft and Pivotal have introduced Azure Spring Cloud, a service for Spring Boot apps that is designed to help developers build scalable microservices without the need to configure underlying ...
A monthly overview of things you need to know as an architect or aspiring architect. Unlock the full InfoQ experience by logging in! Stay updated with your favorite authors and topics, engage with ...
A monthly overview of things you need to know as an architect or aspiring architect. Unlock the full InfoQ experience by logging in! Stay updated with your favorite authors and topics, engage with ...
Microsoft and VMware on Wednesday announced the "general availability" commercial release of Azure Spring Cloud, which provides infrastructure support for Spring Boot Java application developers. Last ...
Seeking to ease the development of Spring-based microservices written in Java on the Azure cloud, Microsoft and Pivotal announced a private preview of a fully managed service called Azure Spring Cloud ...
Microsoft and Pivotal launched a private preview of their Azure Spring Cloud platform that uses Kubernetes to make it easier to deploy and operate Spring Cloud applications and microservices on ...
There is still a lot of Java applications out there that power our businesses. But what happens when we move those Java applications to the public cloud? Can we deploy them without rewriting them and ...