Microsoft and rival Oracle reached an agreement to make their two cloud computing services work together with high-speed links between their data centers, targeting big business users.
The two companies on Wednesday said the high-speed link between their data centers would start with facilities in the eastern United States and spread to other regions. They will work together to let joint users log into to services from either company with a single user name and get tech support from either company.
The move comes as both Oracle and Microsoft are courting large businesses and government customers considering moving computing tasks currently handled in their own data centers to cloud providers.
“With Oracle’s enterprise expertise, this alliance is a natural choice for us as we help our joint customers accelerate the migration of enterprise applications and databases to the public cloud,” Microsoft’s cloud chief Scott Guthrie said in a statement.
AWS, the largest cloud computing provider, is encroaching on many of those customers, including in Oracle’s historical stronghold in the database market.
Ed Anderson, an analyst with research firm Gartner, said the move was a clear “jab” at AWS, especially for Oracle. “It’s no secret that Oracle views AWS as a major competitor in the database market,” he said.
Anderson said there remained some unanswered questions about the deal, such as whether customers would face data transfer fees for moving large amounts of information back and forth between services.
“With this alliance, our joint customers can migrate their entire set of existing applications to the cloud without having to re-architect anything, preserving the large investments they have already made,” Don Johnson, executive vice president of Oracle’s cloud infrastructure unit, said in a statement.
Microsoft has previously inked a deal with German software maker SAP and Adobe to make their services work better together.