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Azure Virtual Desktop for Azure Stack HCI is coming to data centers, but users think it’s not worth the price

Many business owners are not impressed with it.

4 min. read

Published onFebruary 6, 2024

published onFebruary 6, 2024

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Microsoft decided to bring the Azure Virtual Desktop for Azure Stack HCI to data centers, effectively allowing organizations, small businesses, and entrepreneurs to employ the Microsoft Cloud capabilities directly into their infrastructure.

The Redmond-based tech giantsaysthe decision was made because even though the business world is getting into cloud capabilities, the cloud is not the best option for every business out there, and the company wanted to offer options for hybrid contexts.

IT pros face a complex and challenging environment as they help their organizations move to the cloud, especially when the cloud isn’t the best option for every workload. Managing hybrid cloud migrations while meeting the needs of today’s distributed workforce takes a comprehensive approach that balances performance and accessibility with security and control. For organizations that need desktop virtualization for applications that must remain on-premises for performance, data locality, or regulatory reasons, Azure Virtual Desktop for Azure Stack HCI may be the right solution.

The Redmond-based tech giantsaysthat integrating Microsoft Cloud directly into customers’ data centers will mean a plethora of benefits for these companies, including:

To get started, businesses will have to make sure they are licensed correctly and understand the pricing model.

For example, the license that grants access to Azure Virtual Desktop on Azure also applies to Azure Virtual Desktop for Azure Stack HCI. As for the pricing, there will be 2 different fees. First, there will be an infrastructure fee, and there will be a hybrid service fee that begins on April 1, 2024, and costs$0.01/vCore/hour of consumption.

It’s important to take the hybrid fee into consideration, as there are already users who think it’s a new service is not really worth it.

If this fee is not negotiable, for us, it’s cheaper to stay in Azure/W365 than to move this workload on-prem since the on-prem hardware isn’t free.  It’s actuallymoreexpensive if you use a premium Azure Stack HCI solution like Dell.  We wanted to move this workload on-prem to save on costs – but with this, it’s just more work.  Disappointed.

If billing is based on ‘hours of consumption’, how is that consumption metered?  If a customer had, for example, 64 physical cores powered on and assigned to the workload (128 users), providing 128 vCores, with a light load of 1vCore/user with an average of 260 hours active work across the month*, would they be charged 260 hours x 128 cores x $0.01 per month ($333/month) or would it be based on the full 720 hours ($921/month) since on-prem workloads don’t tend to be powered down as aggressively as cloud hosted workloads.

Other users are not really satisfied with this new solution:

I don’t see how you can justify consumption pricing for resources that we own. Shutting down the session hosts doesn’t free up resources for other tenants or change Microsoft’s resource allocation in any way. I could maybe see a justification for active connections through the Azure gateway but there’s no president for this in other Azure services. We already paid for that hardware and the licenses. You don’t get to charge me again to run it. Looks like we are sticking with RDP gateways. It’s sad because we were really looking forward to this solution.

Azure Virtual Desktop for Azure Stack HCI is now available. What do you think about it?

More about the topics:Azure,microsoft

Flavius Floare

Tech Journalist

Flavius is a writer and a media content producer with a particular interest in technology, gaming, media, film and storytelling.

He’s always curious and ready to take on everything new in the tech world, covering Microsoft’s products on a daily basis. The passion for gaming and hardware feeds his journalistic approach, making him a great researcher and news writer that’s always ready to bring you the bleeding edge!

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Flavius Floare

Tech Journalist

Flavius is a writer and a media content producer with a particular interest in technology, gaming, media, film and storytelling.