Why Is Microsoft Using Akamai for Azure Services?

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Asked By CuriousCat92 On

I've had this question for a while, and I hope it's not too silly. I was curious about the server locations for some cloud providers, so I pinged a few URLs to check their regions based on where my clients are located. Here's what I found:

1. Amazon's CDN at m.media-amazon.com is based in Hyderabad.
2. Google's search site at www.google.com shows it's running out of Ashburn.
3. Microsoft's CDN at cdn-dynmedia-1.microsoft.com is located in Vashi, hosted by Akamai.

The interesting part is that while Amazon and Google are using their own servers for their services, Microsoft has its content being hosted by Akamai. If Microsoft isn't relying on its own servers for its services, it makes me wonder why anyone would trust Azure?

3 Answers

Answered By TechWhiz88 On

I don't think it's about trust as much as it is about practicality. Microsoft can absolutely rely on its own infrastructure, but using Akamai can be more cost-effective for delivering content, especially at scale.

Answered By HealthcareHero54 On

From my experience working for a large healthcare company, we're actually moving off of Azure and transitioning to AWS. We had some initial setups in Azure due to an acquisition, but now we're shifting most of our services. Just goes to show that companies have their reasons for choosing different platforms.

Answered By BudgetGuru77 On

Exactly! It might make more financial sense for them to partner with Akamai rather than handling everything in-house. Plus, outsourcing to a specialized CDN can help with performance and reliability.

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