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Microsoft Silverlight 5 and Windows Azure Enterprise Integration

You're reading from   Microsoft Silverlight 5 and Windows Azure Enterprise Integration A step-by-step guide to creating and running scalable Silverlight Enterprise Applications on the Windows Azure platform with this book and ebook

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2012
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849683128
Length 304 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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David Burela David Burela
Author Profile Icon David Burela
David Burela
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Table of Contents (19) Chapters Close

Microsoft Silverlight 5 and Windows Azure Enterprise Integration
Credits
About the Author
1. Acknowledgement
About the Reviewers
2. www.PacktPub.com
3. Preface
1. Getting Started 2. Introduction to Windows Azure FREE CHAPTER 3. Hosting Silverlight Applications in Azure 4. Using Azure Queues with Silverlight 5. Accessing Azure Blob Storage from Silverlight 6. Storing Data in Azure Table Storage from Silverlight 7. Relational Data with SQL Azure and Entity Framework 8. RIA Services and SQL Azure 9. Exposing OData to Silverlight Applications 10. Web-scale Considerations 11. Application Authentication 12. Using Azure AppFabric Caching to Improve Performance

Globalizing your applications


In Chapter 6, Storing Data in Azure Table Storage from Silverlight, it was shown that files could be pushed out through a CDN (Content Delivery Network) to be geographically closer to the end users. The computing resources can also be pushed out to be geographically closer to your global customers in Europe, Asia, and America.

Windows Azure has a product called Windows Azure Traffic Manager that can help you to distribute the computing power across a number of datacenters globally. Windows Azure Traffic Manager allows you to deploy your application onto the multiple datacenters around the world (Europe, Asia, and so on), and then create a single Domain Name Server (DNS) entry, for example,<suffix>.trafficmgr.com). When clients try to access the DNS entry, Windows Azure Traffic Manager will detect the deployment that is closest to the client in location, and redirect them to use it.

This is one way to easily push your application to be closer to your users...

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