The traffic certainly hit my two small instances. My pages were slow (they took about 5 seconds to load during the attack), but the site stayed up (unlike DiscountASP.net, my former ISP, where the DDos attack killed my site.) The hacker
was able to pull 1 TB of data from my site in a 24 hour period; fortunately, Azure bandwidth is cheap, so it only cost me about $100. After I setup the firewall on the instances to block the machines that were running ApacheWeb against my site, my traffic
dropped to normal levels.
Perhaps Azure's DoS and DDos throttling is oriented towards more sophisticated attacks? I have no idea what Azure offers for this, but Azure certainly let me fight off this attack myself.
On a related note, if someone else needs to move to Azure during one of these DDos attacks, be sure to remove the credit card limit ($0.00) from your 3 month trial subscription. I made this mistake when the hacker sent through the 1 TB of data,
and Azure suspended my account when my trial bandwidth allocation ran out. Fortunately, an awesome Azure support employee named Robert Dil re-activated my account (on a Saturday of a 3 day weekend - unbelievable!).