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Cloud Microsoft Technology

LinkedIn Is Migrating To Microsoft Azure (venturebeat.com) 53

An anonymous reader writes: LinkedIn today announced it is swapping out its data centers for the public cloud. The Microsoft-owned company is moving its infrastructure to Azure as part of a multi-year migration. VentureBeat sat down with Mohak Shroff, LinkedIn's SVP of engineering, to discuss one of the biggest technological transformations in the company's history. LinkedIn plans to migrate its 645 million members over several years so as not to compromise the site's accessibility, reliability, and performance. "We think probably at least three years till we're done, possibly longer than that," Shroff confirmed. "It will be a gradual migration. We'll see increasing workloads on Azure over time, with a pretty significant inflection point, about a year and a half, two years out from now. And then kind of an accelerated migration post that."
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LinkedIn Is Migrating To Microsoft Azure

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    Just... buy them.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Indeed. Now they have bigger Azure usage numbers to report, and a migration story to publish that might trick some shops to self-migrate.

  • by reanjr ( 588767 ) on Tuesday July 23, 2019 @01:19PM (#58973716) Homepage

    Is it still public cloud when you run the public cloud?

  • This had to happen (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bjdevil66 ( 583941 ) on Tuesday July 23, 2019 @01:19PM (#58973718)

    They can list all of the technical reasons they want, but it had to happen because Microsoft owns LinkedIn because they don't need people asking questions like, "Why is LinkedIn running on X instead of your stuff?"

    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      The amusing thing is that every LinkedIn or LinkedIn Learning (formerly lynda.com) outage for the next five years will likely be blamed on Azure now, whether or not they were the actual cause of the issue.

      They probably should have kept this migration quiet until necessary. Sure, some of the IT folks around here will need to know what the new IP address blocks are so we can update our firewall rules accordingly, but it probably didn't need to be public knowledge.

      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        Ah, yes, have a heart for the poor marketdroids running MS, when have they ever been reticent about puffing up their tiny little chests and bellowing about whatever whizzy they have just afflicted their users with?

      • It's ok, I stopped using LinkedIn when MS bought it. I just feel sorry for whoever is left that isn't one of 3 billion indians constantly spamming everyone with friend requests.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Reminds me of Pixar. Pixar used Linux on their rendering platform, and wasn't shy about taking about it until....Steve Jobs returned to Apple. Then the word "Linux" was dropped from stories when talking about their rendering platform, and then the inevitable switch to Mac OS X.

  • I am serious — and don’t call me Shirley.
  • how hard can it be to migrate? it's a web site with a database - all the edge stuff is probably handled by a cdn - i figured it ran on a few servers - i would love to see a case study about their architecture and how they migrated it

  • by Seven Spirals ( 4924941 ) on Tuesday July 23, 2019 @03:42PM (#58974576)
    You can "migrate" there, sure. Just don't pretend it was cool. Kind of like migrating from your 2-seater coupe into an SUV or minivan. Tell yourself whatever makes you feel better about it.
  • Given nobody wants to be anywhere such a toxic cesspool of SPAM and malware moving LinkedIn to Azure is a sure fire way to get Azure blocked.

"Conversion, fastidious Goddess, loves blood better than brick, and feasts most subtly on the human will." -- Virginia Woolf, "Mrs. Dalloway"

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