Spiceworks Network Monitoring Tool
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dear scott did you tried nagios before ?
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@IT-ADMIN said:
dear scott did you tried nagios before ?
Yes, although not very much. It is very complicated but very powerful. Before looking at Nagios I would check out Zabbix. Zabbix tends to be much more preferred by people in the SMB market.
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It took a while, But I think you two finally landed on the same page.
Spiceworks gets it's revenue from selling your data to vendors and showing vendor ads to you.
But I do agree that some manager who might be given access to SpiceWorks might think that their server is the one serving up these ads, or that their data is sitting on someone else's server and that server is serving up ads to them, neither case is desirable.
But as more and more things go cloud/hosted based, the potential for others to read/use/etc our data to their own means (take Google and email for example).
I'm not saying it's good or bad, just the trade off you pay for free software.
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Not that Nagios isn't great, Nagios, Zabbix and Zenoss are all good options.
If you want to investigate, @Lakshmana has recently implemented a working Zabbix system. He could give you a tour of what he has done and could even help you implement it. I know that he is recently out of work (quit a terrible job) and would love if you were able to hire him for a few days to do a Zabbix project for you
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Lol
It looks like I will follow the same decision as him soon -
It's a nice tool. Not as pretty as Spiceworks, but scales really well. It is more monitoring rather than discovery. A big piece of SW is that it does network discovery in a rather unique way. Both makes it very useful and very intensive.
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@scottalanmiller said:
It's a nice tool. Not as pretty as Spiceworks, but scales really well. It is more monitoring rather than discovery. A big piece of SW is that it does network discovery in a rather unique way. Both makes it very useful and very intensive.
Spiceworks network monitoring is a separate tool from the scanner.
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@IT-ADMIN said:
non IT manager who consider those ads as malwares and know nothing about spicework,
Why would anyone outside of IT care about this? This is IT's decision.
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@JaredBusch said:
Spiceworks network monitoring is a separate tool from the scanner.
And a bit of a resource hog. Opmanager is totally worth the money over it.
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@Jason said:
@JaredBusch said:
Spiceworks network monitoring is a separate tool from the scanner.
And a bit of a resource hog. Opmanager is totally worth the money over it.
how much?
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@Dashrender said:
how much?
You'd need to get a quote for your network. It depends on what all you are monitoring.
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@Dashrender said:
how much?
@Jason said:
You'd need to get a quote for your network. It depends on what all you are monitoring.
Piss on that. As a vendor, you better give me MSRP on the website or I will be hard pressed to ever buy from you.
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@JaredBusch said:
Piss on that. As a vendor, you better give me MSRP on the website or I will be hard pressed to ever buy from you.
manage engine product almost all need quotes, they have so many different ways of licensing and addons and such. We just do the subscription based ones.
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@JaredBusch said:
@Dashrender said:
how much?
@Jason said:
You'd need to get a quote for your network. It depends on what all you are monitoring.
Piss on that. As a vendor, you better give me MSRP on the website or I will be hard pressed to ever buy from you.
Yep - this is how I feel. Now, you might offer me better pricing once I contact you, but I probably won't even bother calling if there is no price on your website. (actually I knew there wasn't, which is why I asked - was really hoping @Jason would post whatever he paid and the quantity of devices being monitored).
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I, too, am in the "no public pricing, no call from me" boat.
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@Jason said:
@JaredBusch said:
manage engine product almost all need quotes, they have so many different ways of licensing and addons and such. We just do the subscription based ones.That's fine - but I still want a baseline pricing - I hate calling. Once I call I'm stuck forever on a calling sheet. No thanks. Let me get a rough, even really rough price to I know if I should even bother calling.
Though that said, I've seem some ridiculous prices listed on websites only to find out the standard pricing is almost always 50% or less than the pricing listed.
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@Dashrender said:
@Jason would post whatever he paid and the quantity of devices being monitored).
We bundle our subscriptions for Service Desk Plus, Opmanager and desktop central. Pricing is all together for us.
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This post is deleted! -
Kind of makes them not ready for the market then. Who would go down that path to even find out if they are viable? You need the pricing before even caring enough to do a free trial.
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@JaredBusch said:
Piss on that. As a vendor, you better give me MSRP on the website or I will be hard pressed to ever buy from you.
@Jason said:
manage engine product almost all need quotes, they have so many different ways of licensing and addons and such. We just do the subscription based ones.
Products needing quotes to get the best price is pretty normal. But if there is no price to even give me a baseline, screw that.
Also, your specific example of ManageEngine has very detail base pricing right on their website. They are a great example of the right way to do things.