A Quick Glance

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    Build solutions using Azure technologies

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    Prepare for the Microsoft Azure Architect Technologies exam

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    Includes official Microsoft material

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    Taught by Microsoft Certified Trainers

This four-day course teaches IT Professionals how to manage their Azure resources, including deployment and configuration of virtual machines, virtual networks, storage accounts, and Azure AD - including implementing and managing hybrid identities. You will also learn how cloud resources are managed in Azure through user and group accounts, and how to grant access to Azure AD users, groups, and services using Role-based access control (RBAC).

Who should take this course

The course is aimed at Azure Solutions Architects

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Prerequisites

You should have practical experience with operating systems, virtualisation, cloud infrastructure, storage structures, billing, and networking.

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  Course Overview

Understand how to discover, assess, plan, and implement a migration of on-premises resources and infrastructure to Azure. Delegates will learn how to use Azure Migrate to perform the discovery and assessment phase that is critical to a successful migration. Delegates will also learn how to use Azure Site Recovery for performing the actual migration of workloads to Azure. The course focuses primarily on using ASR on a Hyper-V infrastructure to prepare and complete the migration process.

Understand how to build Logic App solutions that integrate apps, data, systems, and services across enterprises or organisations by automating tasks and business processes as workflows. Logic Apps is cloud service in Azure that simplifies how you design and create scalable solutions for app integration, data integration, system integration, enterprise application integration (EAI), and business-to-business (B2B) communication, whether in the cloud, on premises, or both.

Delegates will learn how to implement authentication in applications (certificates, Azure AD, Azure AD Connect, token-based), implement secure data (SSL and TLS), and manage cryptographic keys in Azure Key Vault.

Delegates will also learn how to configure a message-based integration architecture, develop for asynchronous processing, create apps for autoscaling, and better understand Azure Cognitive Services solutions.

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  Course Content

Deploying and Configuring Infrastructure (AZ-300T01)​

  • Module 1: Managing Azure Subscriptions and Resources
  • Module 2: Implementing and Managing Storage
  • Module 3: Deploying and Managing Virtual Machines (VMs)
  • Module 4: Configuring and Managing Virtual Networks#
  • Module 5: Managing Identities

Implementing Workloads and Security (AZ-300T02)

  • Module 1: Evaluating and Performing Server Migration to Azure
  • Module 2: Implementing and Managing Application Services
  • Module 3: Implementing Advanced Virtual Networking
  • Module 4: Securing Identities

Understanding Cloud Architect Technology Solutions (AZ-300T03)

  • Module 1: Selecting Compute and Storage Solutions
  • Module 2: Hybrid Networking
  • Module 3: Measuring Throughput and Structure of Data Access

Creating and Deploying Apps (AZ-300T04)

  • Module 1: Creating Web Applications using PaaS
  • Module 2: Creating Apps and Services Running on Service Fabric
  • Module 3: Using Azure Kubernetes Service This module focuses on the Azure

Implementing Authentication and Secure Data (AZ-300T05)

  • Module 1: Implementing Authentication
  • Module 2: Implementing Secure Data

Developing for the Cloud (AZ-300T06)

  • Module 1: Developing Long-Running Tasks and Distributed Transactions
  • Module 2: Configuring a Message-Based Integration Architecture
  • Module 3: Developing for Asynchronous Processing
  • Module 4: Developing for Autoscaling
  • Module 5: Developing Azure Cognitive Services Solutions
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Microsoft Azure Architect Technologies Enquiry

 

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Reach us at +44 1344 961530 or info@pentagonit.co.uk for more information.

About Carlisle

Carlisle, a city in Cumbria, is also the managerial centre of the City of Carlisle region in North West England. It is the main settlement in the county of Cumbria and helps as the managerial centre for both Carlisle City Council and Cumbria County Council. At the time of the 2001 survey, the population of Carlisle was 71,773. In 2011, the city's population had increased to 75,306, with 107,524 in the wider city.

The early history of Carlisle is noticeable as a Roman payment, recognised to serve the forts on Hadrian's Wall. In the Middle Ages, because of its nearness to the Realm of Scotland, Carlisle industrialised meaningfully. The armed stranglehold, Carlisle Castle, was built in 1092 by William Rufus, and once added as a custodial for Mary, Queen of Scots. The castle now relatives the Duke of Lancaster's Regiment and the Border Regiment Museum. In the 12th century, Henry I allowed the building of a priory in Carlisle. The town produced the rank of a city when its diocese was formed in 1133, and the cloister industrialised Carlisle Cathedral.

Governance:

Carlisle has detained city status since the Middle Ages. Also, it kept its status as an area constituency or governmental borough for centuries, at one time returning two MPs. In 1835 it became a municipal borough and was later upgraded to a  borough status in 1914. The city's boundaries have changed several times since 1835 the final time in 1974. 

The municipal area surrounded many parts of parishes which were combined into a single civil parish of Carlisle in 1904. The currently present urban area is considered as an unparished area. Carlisle had in 2002 made an unsuccessful attempt to grow to a Lord Mayoralty. An iconic building that stands tallest in Carlisle may be demolished, and the area nearby to it rehabilitated.

Climate:

Carlisle practices an oceanic climate. In January 2005 Carlisle was hit by strong wind storms and torrential rains. On Saturday 8 January 2005 all roads into Carlisle were shut owed to severe flooding, the worst since 1822, which produced three deaths. Less severe but still significant flooding occurred in 2009, but due to Storm Desmond. Carlisle experienced even worse flooding than 2005 between Friday 4 and Sunday 6 December 2015. During this time, nearly 36 hours of nonstop precipitation broke flood defences. This left several areas submerged including Bitts Park, Hardwicke Circus and Warwick Road. This left the famous Sands Centre, stranded from the rest of the city. As several other areas of Cumbria were also severely pretentious, all trains to Scotland were postponed forever. The trains on the West Coast Principal went no further than Preston. Prime Minister David Cameron stayed the city on 7 December 2015 to measure the damage.

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