Beaglebone and Azure are not a problem, Azure is a generic Microsoft 
branded cloud resource, which you can run locally.

For reference, I have a mixed stack of Linux and Windows servers running on 
a Microsoft Hyper-V Server stack.  Node.js and C#.net (mono) are common 
across all the platforms.  There is no charge for the basic hyper-V server, 
you just pay for the Microsoft licensed products you have running on it. 
 There is no limit to the Linux resources you have running.    Unless you 
want Visual Studio supporting Windows 10 IoT  or SQL Server there is no 
compelling need for Microsoft anything.  Libvirt and KVM are a good 
substitute for Hyper-V.

Generic Hyper-V Server SKU: 
 10586.0.151029-1700.TH2_RELEASE_SERVERHYPERCORE_OEM_X64FRE_EN-US

I haven't found anything on Azure that I can't already do locally using a 
stack of Microsoft and Linux servers and desktops except for the big data 
analytics offerings.  If you need access to Microsoft products as a 
developer, you can subscribe to one of their MAPS programs.

On Sunday, April 3, 2016 at 5:55:05 PM UTC-4, Sean McMahon wrote:
>
> Hmm.... Not much response.
>
> I came across this : 
> https://www.microsoft.com/en-gb/server-cloud/internet-of-things/azure-iot-suite.aspx
>
> Anyone tried it out?
>
> On Monday, 28 March 2016 14:59:33 UTC+1, Sean McMahon wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> I'm looking to talk to my beaglebone over an azure virtual machine, 
>> (external network).  
>>
>> Are there any good tutorials on how to control a beaglebone from the web.
>>
>> I've been searching the web for about three hours and haven't found 
>> anything suitable yet.
>>
>> Thanks,
>> Seán
>>
>

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