Ricardo Villalobos Microsoft

  1. Ricardo Villalobos Md Kissimmee
  2. Ricardo Villalobos Microsoft Office
Background information
Birth nameRicardo Villalobos
Also known asBispeed Black, Richard Wolfsdorf, Termiten, Alliv Sobol
Born1970 (age 48–49) Santiago de Chile, Chile
OriginDarmstadt, Germany
GenresMicrohouse
Minimal Techno
Techno
Occupation(s)Disc jockey
Record producer
Years active1993–present
LabelsSei Es Drum
Perlon
Playhouse
Frisbee Tracks
Sister Phunk
Lo-Fi Stereo
Cadenza Music
Associated actsBajo Tierra, Chirurgie Boutique, Gucci, Hombre Ojo, R & R, Ric Y Martin, Ricardo vs. Jay, Sense Club

Ricardo Villalobos (born 6 August 1970) is a Chilean-born German electronic music producer and DJ.[1] He is well known for his work in the minimal techno and microhouse genres, and is one of the most significant figures in today's minimal techno scene.[1]

Over the past several months MSDN Magazine has welcomed a pair of new columns—Rachel Appel’s Modern Apps and Bruno Terkaly’s and Ricardo Villalobos’ Azure Insider. Ricardo Villalobos, Berlin, Germany. 788,893 likes 2,310 talking about this. This page is not managed by Ricardo himself, yet we do our best to provide. In the current, March issue of MSDN Magazine, you can read Bruno Terkaly and Ricardo Villalobos’ latest Windows Azure Insider column, titled “The Windows Azure Service Bus and the Internet of Things, Part 2.” The column dives into the specifics of machine-to-machine (or M2M) computing and offers a hands-on look at how Windows Azure. Jun 26, 2013  Speaker: Charles Lamanna, MetricsHub Founder & Developer Lead and Ricardo Villalobos, Senior Cloud Architect at Microsoft Slides: http://www.slideshare.net/p. Vasco is a two-part EP by Ricardo Villalobos. It was released by Perlon on LP and CD in the spring and fall of 2008. The original 12' vinyl pressings include 'Minimoonstar', 'Electronic Water' and 'Amazordum', alongside remixes of each song by Shackleton, San Proper and Baby Ford.

  • 2Discography

Life and work[edit]

View Ricardo Villalobos’ profile on LinkedIn, the world's largest professional community. Ricardo has 1 job listed on their profile. See the complete profile on LinkedIn and discover Ricardo’s.

Villalobos was born in Chile on 6 August 1970.[1][2] In 1973[2] he moved to Germany with his family to escape the dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet,[1][3] who had seized power that year.

When Villalobos was around 10 or 11 he started to play conga and bongos. He began making electronic music in the late 80s. From a very young age he has been a big fan of Depeche Mode, following their tours around Europe to listen to them.

Ricardo Villalobos Md Kissimmee

Villalobos began to play his music at parties while he was studying at university, but this was only for his own enjoyment. He started a label, Placid Flavour, in 1993 but this was unsuccessful. His first record was released on the German Playhouse label in 1994[1] and he began DJing as a professional in 1998.

In 2006 Villalobos, along with Richie Hawtin and Luciano, played to around 300,000 people at the Berlin Loveparade.[1]

At the end of 2008 and 2010, he came first in Resident Advisor's Top 100 DJs of the year.[4]

Many electronic DJs and musicians refer to him as an everlasting source of inspiration. For example, Jamie Jones completely redefined his musical library and style after one of his Ibiza set in 2005,[5] that was also a life-changing moment for Damian Lazarus.

Discography[edit]

Studio albums[edit]

  • The Contempt (1995)
  • Alcachofa (2003)
  • Thé Au Harem D'Archimède (2004)
  • Sei Es Drum (2007)
  • Dependent and Happy (2012)
  • Empirical House (2017)

Compilations[edit]

  • Love Family Trax (2002)
  • In the Mix: Taka Taka (2003)
  • Green & Blue (2005)
  • fabric36 (2007)

Singles and EPs[edit]

  • Sinus Poetry EP (1993)
  • The Contempt (1995)
  • Heike (1995)
  • N-DRA (1996)
  • Salvador (1998)
  • 808 the Bassqueen (1999)
  • Frank Mueller Melodram (1999)
  • Pino Jet Explosion (1999)
  • Ibiza99 (2000)
  • Luna (2000)
  • Que Belle Epoque (2000)
  • Tomorrov Cocktail / Ananas (2000)
  • Bredow / Damm 3 (2001)
  • Halma (2002)
  • 808 The Bass Queen / Filtadelic (2003)
  • The Contempt (2004)
  • Achso (2005)
  • Chromosul (2005)
  • For Disco Only 2 (2005)
  • Que Belle Epoque 2006 (2006)
  • Heike (2006)
  • Seive / Jimis (2006)
  • Unflug (2006)
  • What You Say Is More Than I Can Say (2006)
  • What's Wrong My Friends? (2006)
  • Fizheuer Zieheuer (2006)
  • Enfants (2008)
  • Vasco EP part 1 (2008)
  • Vasco EP part 2 (2008)
  • Peculiar / 3 Züge (2010)
  • Any Ideas / Emilio (2012)
  • Baby EP (2012)
  • Voodog (2014)
  • Who Are We? EP (2015)

Remixes[edit]

  • 1996 Der Dritte Raum – 'Trommelmaschine'
  • 1997 Heiko Laux & Johannes Heil – 'No Pain No Gain'
  • 1997 Sieg Über Die Sonne – 'Mogul'
  • 1999 Vermittelnde-Elemente – 'Modedom'
  • 2000 The Horrorist – 'One Night in NYC'
  • 2000 Heiko Laux – 'Moved'
  • 2000 Pascal F.E.O.S. – 'Are U Tranquilized'
  • 2001 Auch – 'Tomorrow Goodbye'
  • 2001 Two Lone Swordsmen – 'Bunker'
  • 2002 Auch – 'Pick-Up'
  • 2002 Thomas Dolby – 'One of our Submarines'
  • 2002 Jeff Samuel – 'Vew'
  • 2002 Tony Senghore – 'Where Is the Love?'
  • 2002 Señor Coconut And His Orchestra – 'Electro Latino'
  • 2002 Sieg Über Die Sonne – 'You'll Never Come Back'
  • 2003 Hell – 'Listen to the Hiss'
  • 2003 Monne Automne – 'El Salvador'
  • 2003 Spektrum – 'Freakbox'
  • 2003 Sven Väth – 'Cala Llonga'
  • 2004 Alter Ego – 'Daktari'
  • 2004 DJ Minx – 'A Walk in the Park'
  • 2004 Lopazz – 'Migracion'
  • 2004 Lucien–N–Luciano – 'Alain Brito'
  • 2004 Monobox – 'Trade'
  • 2004 Sieg Über Die Sonne – 'Love Is OK'
  • 2005 2raumwohnung – 'Wir Sind Die Anderen'
  • 2005 The KLF – 'What Time Is Love?'
  • 2005 Sieg Über Die Sonne – 'Cleaning Windows'
  • 2005 Vegetable Orchestra – 'Atavismus'
  • 2005 Das Racist - 'The Bing Bong Chong-a-Long'
  • 2006 Depeche Mode – 'The Sinner in Me'
  • 2006 Rhythm & Sound with Ras Donovan & Ras Perez – 'Let We Go'
  • 2006 Señor Coconut And His Orchestra – 'Behind the Mask'
  • 2007 Beck – 'Cellphone's Dead'
  • 2007 Ffwd – 'Consequences'
  • 2007 Innersphere – 'Phunk'
  • 2007 Plastikman – 'Snark'
  • 2007 Shackleton – 'Blood on My Hands'
  • 2008 Sun Electric – 'Toninas'
  • 2008 Slap - 'Eden Now'
  • 2010 NDF - 'Since We Last Met'
  • 2010 DJ Sneak - 'Delta Trippin'
  • 2010 Wareika - 'King's Child'
  • 2011 Energy 52 - 'Café Del Mar'
  • 2012 Conrad Schnitzler - 'Zug' (with Max Loderbauer)
  • 2012 The Orb Featuring Lee Scratch Perry - 'Soulman' (with Max Loderbauer)
  • 2013 Mari Kvien Brunvoll - 'Everywhere You Go'

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcdefSherburne, Philip (2007). 'Time out of joint'. The Wire. No. 282. The Wire Magazine Ltd. pp. 30–35.
  2. ^ ab'Biography: Ricardo Villalobos'. Fabric London Press Website. Archived from the original on 2008-01-27. Retrieved 2007-08-25.
  3. ^Kellman, Andy. Biography of Ricardo Villalobos at AllMusic. Retrieved 2007-08-25.
  4. ^'RA Poll: Top 100 DJs of 2008'. Residentadvisor.net. 2008-12-19. Retrieved 2014-08-06.
  5. ^'Seven DJs tell us about the Ibiza sets that changed their lives'. Mixmag. Retrieved 2018-03-21.
Group

External links[edit]

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ricardo Villalobos.
  • Ricardo Villalobos discography at Discogs
  • Ricardo Villalobos: Sound brotherhood Interview (2009) at Resident Advisor
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ricardo_Villalobos&oldid=919749985'
Microsoft Azure Web Sites
Developer(s)Microsoft
Initial release27 June 2013; 6 years ago
Operating systemWindows
LicenseClosed source for platform, open source for client SDKs
Websiteazure.microsoft.com/en-gb/services/app-service/web/

Microsoft Azure Web Sites is a cloud computing based platform for hosting websites, created and operated by Microsoft. Microsoft Azure Web Sites is a platform as a service (PaaS) which allows publishing Web apps running on multiple frameworks and written in different programming languages (.NET, node.js, PHP, Python and Java), including Microsoft proprietary ones and 3rd party ones. Microsoft Azure Web Sites became available in its first preview version in June 2012, and an official version ('General Availability') was announced in June 2013.[1] Microsoft Azure Web Sites was originally named Windows Azure Web Sites, but was renamed as part of a re-branding move across Azure in March 2014.[2] It was subsequently renamed 'App Services' in March 2015[3].

Ricardo Villalobos Microsoft Office

Features[edit]

Microsoft Azure Web Sites is a web-hosting platform that supports multiple technologies, and programming languages (.NET, node.js, PHP, Python).[4] Users with Microsoft Azure subscriptions can create Websites, and deploy content and code into the Web sites. Microsoft Azure Web Sites supports a website creation wizard which allows the user to create a blank site, or create a site based on one of several available pre-configured images from the website gallery.[5][6]

As part of creating the website, the site's URL is assigned a subdomain of azurewebsites.net. In various for-pay tiers, a website can be assigned one or more custom domains. This is implemented by setting a CNAME record on the DNS server that hosts the user's domain's zone to point at the user's web site hosted in Azure.[7] On some for-pay tiers, the user has the added option of uploading an SSLcertificate and configuring his site to be bound to HTTPS.[8]

Once a site has been created, the user can add or modify its content using multiple deployment methods, including Web Deploy (MSDeploy), TFS (via Visual Studio), FTP, FTPS, WebMatrix, CodePlex, GitHub, Dropbox, Bitbucket, Mercurial and local Git.[9]

Other features of Azure Web Sites are:

  • User-selected placement in one or multiple data centers across the globe.
  • Uptime SLA of 99.95% for Standard tier customers.[10]
  • Continuous monitoring of site metrics such as CPU time, Data in, Data out, HTTP errors and additional metrics.
  • Setting of monitoring alerts.[11]
  • Log collection and failed request tracing for tracking and troubleshooting.
  • Deployment of a Microsoft SQL or MySQL database to be used with web applications.[12]
  • Websites are hosted on IIS 8.0 running on a custom version of Windows Server 2012.
  • Support for 4 service tiers: Free, Shared, Basic and Standard (dedicated).[13]
  • In the Basic and Standard tiers, support for 3 VM sizes for scaling up.[14]
  • In the for-pay tiers, support for manual or automatic scaling-out with up to 10 instances of VMs.[15]
  • Support for integration with Azure Traffic Manager to route traffic manually or automatically between websites in different regions across the globe.
  • Authentication using Microsoft Azure Active Directory

Implementation[edit]

Microsoft Azure Web Sites is implemented as websites that are dynamically created on-demand on servers running Windows Server 2012 and IIS 8.0. When a client posts a request to a web site, Microsoft Azure Web Sites dynamically provisions the site on one of the Azure virtual machines pointing it at content stored in Azure Storage containers. The Azure Virtual Machines are deployed in groups called 'Stamps', which may contain hundreds of such machines. Microsoft deploys these stamps in its Azure data centers across the world, and adds more stamps as demand grows.[16]

Tiers[edit]

Azure Web Sites services are offered in 4 tiers. The entry-level tier is the 'free' tier. The free tier supports up to 10 websites with 1 GB of content storage, and is limited to 165 MB of daily data egress. The first for-pay tier is the 'Shared' tier. Shared tier sites support custom domains and can be scaled out to up to 6 instances. The current highest for-pay tier is the 'Standard' tier. Standard tier websites run on VMs dedicated exclusively to a single customer's websites. The Standard tier supports SSL (both SNI and IP-based), scaling out to up to 10 instances, and file storage of up to 50 GB of content.

Basic and Standard tier websites can be deployed on 3 sizes of virtual machines: Small VMs with 1 virtual CPU and 1.75GB of RAM, Medium VMs with 2 virtual CPUs and 3.5 GB of RAM, and Large VMs with 4 virtual CPUs and 7GB of available RAM.[17]

History[edit]

Microsoft initially offered a basic web hosting service as part of Office Live Small Business, which was launched in late 2007. Office Live Small Business offered customers free and commercial web hosting with a built-in system for creating websites based on build-in templates and a site creation wizard.[18]

When Microsoft started allocating resources into developing its numerous cloud solutions, a group was formed in Microsoft Azure to develop Microsoft Azure Web Sites. Microsoft Azure Web Sites was announced in June 2012 as a preview release.[19]

In parallel, Microsoft developed Microsoft Azure Pack, which offers the same technology that can be installed as a private-cloud on sets of servers at a customer's site and under direct customer control.[20]

In mid-2013, both Microsoft Azure Web Sites and Microsoft Azure Pack were officially released to the public.[21]

Datacenters[edit]

Microsoft operates Microsoft Azure in a number of data centers throughout the world with Microsoft Azure Web Sites available in a subset of these. When deploying websites on Microsoft Azure Web Sites customers can choose to deploy sites in a data center in any of the following geographical regions: East US, North central US, West US, East Asia, Brazil South, North Europe, West Europe, Japan East, Japan West or East Asia.[22]

References[edit]

  1. ^'Announcing the general availability of Microsoft Azure Mobile Services, Web Sites and continued service innovation'. Microsoft. 27 June 2013.
  2. ^'Microsoft to rebrand 'Windows Azure' as 'Microsoft Azure''. ZDNet. 24 March 2014.
  3. ^'Announcing Azure App Service | Blog | Microsoft Azure'. azure.microsoft.com. Retrieved 26 July 2018.
  4. ^'Azure Web Sites Features'. Microsoft.
  5. ^'Microsoft Azure Web Sites Gallery'. Microsoft.
  6. ^'Microsoft Azure Web Applications'. Microsoft.
  7. ^'Configuring a custom domain name for a Microsoft Azure website'. Microsoft. 1 February 2013.
  8. ^'Configuring an SSL certificate for a Microsoft Azure website'. Microsoft. 1 May 2013.
  9. ^'Publishing from Source Control to Microsoft Azure Web Sites'. Microsoft. 31 October 2012.
  10. ^'Microsoft Azure Support: Service Level Agreement'. Microsoft. 1 October 2013.
  11. ^'How to Monitor Websites'. Microsoft. 1 January 2013.
  12. ^'How to Configure Websites'. Microsoft. 12 October 2012.
  13. ^'Websites Pricing Details'. Microsoft.
  14. ^'Websites Pricing Details'. Microsoft.
  15. ^'How to Scale Websites'. Microsoft. 21 October 2012.
  16. ^Bruno Terkaly and Ricardo Villalobos (1 April 2013). 'NoSQL Data in the Cloud with Microsoft Azure Tables'. MSDN Magazine.
  17. ^'Websites Pricing Details'. Microsoft.
  18. ^'Media Alert: New Microsoft Office Live Small Business Offering Helps Small Businesses Get Started With Search Engine Marketing'. Microsoft. 3 October 2007.
  19. ^Scott Guthrie (7 June 2012). 'Meet the New Microsoft Azure'. Microsoft.
  20. ^Darryl K. Taft (21 August 2013). 'Microsoft Microsoft Azure Pack Enables Modern App Development'. eWeek.
  21. ^'Announcing the General Availability of Microsoft Azure Mobile Services, Websites and continued Service innovation'. Microsoft. 27 June 2013.
  22. ^'Microsoft Azure Service Dashboard'. Microsoft.

External links[edit]

Microsoft
Other
Retrieved from 'https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Microsoft_Azure_Web_Sites&oldid=852075038'

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