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    Let's all get blindsided together!

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    • coliverC
      coliver @scottalanmiller
      last edited by

      @scottalanmiller said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

      @coliver said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

      @scottalanmiller said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

      Amazon's email

      I didn't even know Amazon did Email.

      It's relatively recent.

      The Free tier is interesting. You can send up to 62,000 emails a month if you are accessing it from an EC2 instance. That's pretty cool.

      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • C
        Carnival Boy
        last edited by

        I've never understood discussions on the price of e-mail. All offerings seem so trivially cheap to me. I mean in the US you're paying your employees, on average, over $50,000 per year and you're worried about an extra $50 a year for e-mail? We probably spend more on paper towels in the rest room than e-mail but I rarely see the president starting that discussion.

        DashrenderD pchiodoP 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 2
        • DashrenderD
          Dashrender @Carnival Boy
          last edited by

          @Carnival-Boy said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

          I've never understood discussions on the price of e-mail. All offerings seem so trivially cheap to me. I mean in the US you're paying your employees, on average, over $50,000 per year and you're worried about an extra $50 a year for e-mail? We probably spend more on paper towels in the rest room than e-mail but I rarely see the president starting that discussion.

          Per employee? Damn they go through a huge amount of TP. 😛

          scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
          • C
            Carnival Boy
            last edited by

            Erm..I haven't done the maths :), but you've got the cost of maintaining the dispensers, employing someone to fill them, disposing of the used ones, ordering new ones.

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @coliver
              last edited by

              @coliver said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

              @scottalanmiller said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

              @coliver said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

              @scottalanmiller said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

              Amazon's email

              I didn't even know Amazon did Email.

              It's relatively recent.

              The Free tier is interesting. You can send up to 62,000 emails a month if you are accessing it from an EC2 instance. That's pretty cool.

              And nearly useless 😉

              coliverC 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • coliverC
                coliver @scottalanmiller
                last edited by

                @scottalanmiller said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                @coliver said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                @scottalanmiller said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                @coliver said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                @scottalanmiller said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                Amazon's email

                I didn't even know Amazon did Email.

                It's relatively recent.

                The Free tier is interesting. You can send up to 62,000 emails a month if you are accessing it from an EC2 instance. That's pretty cool.

                And nearly useless 😉

                For this conversation yes. But for web apps built for EC2 this could be a good tool. Although if you're building apps on EC2 and need to send email I'd guess you'd need to do far more then 62,000 a month.

                scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @Dashrender
                  last edited by

                  @Dashrender said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                  @Carnival-Boy said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                  I've never understood discussions on the price of e-mail. All offerings seem so trivially cheap to me. I mean in the US you're paying your employees, on average, over $50,000 per year and you're worried about an extra $50 a year for e-mail? We probably spend more on paper towels in the rest room than e-mail but I rarely see the president starting that discussion.

                  Per employee? Damn they go through a huge amount of TP. 😛

                  That's not THAT much unless you are buying that horrible single ply stuff that doesn't hold up at all.

                  DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • scottalanmillerS
                    scottalanmiller @coliver
                    last edited by

                    @coliver said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                    @scottalanmiller said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                    @coliver said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                    @scottalanmiller said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                    @coliver said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                    @scottalanmiller said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                    Amazon's email

                    I didn't even know Amazon did Email.

                    It's relatively recent.

                    The Free tier is interesting. You can send up to 62,000 emails a month if you are accessing it from an EC2 instance. That's pretty cool.

                    And nearly useless 😉

                    For this conversation yes. But for web apps built for EC2 this could be a good tool. Although if you're building apps on EC2 and need to send email I'd guess you'd need to do far more then 62,000 a month.

                    Right. This is really only useful for like testing and stuff.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • DashrenderD
                      Dashrender @scottalanmiller
                      last edited by

                      @scottalanmiller said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                      @Dashrender said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                      @Carnival-Boy said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                      I've never understood discussions on the price of e-mail. All offerings seem so trivially cheap to me. I mean in the US you're paying your employees, on average, over $50,000 per year and you're worried about an extra $50 a year for e-mail? We probably spend more on paper towels in the rest room than e-mail but I rarely see the president starting that discussion.

                      Per employee? Damn they go through a huge amount of TP. 😛

                      That's not THAT much unless you are buying that horrible single ply stuff that doesn't hold up at all.

                      wait, isn't that the only thing they use in all of Europe. (said jokingly since I know it's not true - but I've heard the cracks about how americans have to have two ply, etc).

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • pchiodoP
                        pchiodo @Carnival Boy
                        last edited by

                        @Carnival-Boy said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                        I've never understood discussions on the price of e-mail. All offerings seem so trivially cheap to me. I mean in the US you're paying your employees, on average, over $50,000 per year and you're worried about an extra $50 a year for e-mail? We probably spend more on paper towels in the rest room than e-mail but I rarely see the president starting that discussion.

                        It certainly is about perspective. One of the things I like to bring up in meetings is how much is the meeting costing. When you have even as little as 5 people in the room, and the average salary is still a meager $50K, it's still costing $120+ an hour to be in the room. Increase this by 4 or 5 more people and add executive management and your talking $1000/hour just to talk about saving less than $5K/year.

                        scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                        • scottalanmillerS
                          scottalanmiller @pchiodo
                          last edited by

                          @pchiodo said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                          @Carnival-Boy said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                          I've never understood discussions on the price of e-mail. All offerings seem so trivially cheap to me. I mean in the US you're paying your employees, on average, over $50,000 per year and you're worried about an extra $50 a year for e-mail? We probably spend more on paper towels in the rest room than e-mail but I rarely see the president starting that discussion.

                          It certainly is about perspective. One of the things I like to bring up in meetings is how much is the meeting costing. When you have even as little as 5 people in the room, and the average salary is still a meager $50K, it's still costing $120+ an hour to be in the room. Increase this by 4 or 5 more people and add executive management and your talking $1000/hour just to talk about saving less than $5K/year.

                          I call this the "high cost of decision making". You have to account for the time to research the solutions, too. And the risk of the change. And the cost of making the change.

                          pchiodoP 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                          • pchiodoP
                            pchiodo @scottalanmiller
                            last edited by

                            @scottalanmiller said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                            @pchiodo said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                            @Carnival-Boy said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                            I've never understood discussions on the price of e-mail. All offerings seem so trivially cheap to me. I mean in the US you're paying your employees, on average, over $50,000 per year and you're worried about an extra $50 a year for e-mail? We probably spend more on paper towels in the rest room than e-mail but I rarely see the president starting that discussion.

                            It certainly is about perspective. One of the things I like to bring up in meetings is how much is the meeting costing. When you have even as little as 5 people in the room, and the average salary is still a meager $50K, it's still costing $120+ an hour to be in the room. Increase this by 4 or 5 more people and add executive management and your talking $1000/hour just to talk about saving less than $5K/year.

                            I call this the "high cost of decision making". You have to account for the time to research the solutions, too. And the risk of the change. And the cost of making the change.

                            Exactly. An email migration is going to cost well in excess of $5K when you take into account the tech time, the learning time, not to mention the lost productivity while everyone learns a new system.

                            J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 3
                            • J
                              Jason Banned @pchiodo
                              last edited by

                              @pchiodo said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                              Exactly. An email migration is going to cost well in excess of $5K when you take into account the tech time, the learning time, not to mention the lost productivity while everyone learns a new system.

                              I guess for SMBs migrations have a high cost but in large companies most of us are familiar with the majority of systems out their and can automate a migration in no time. granted when we move the cost could have been $5k in time. but that was for a lot of people. Like less than 10 cents a user.

                              The primary reason we migrate isn't overall IT costs of the system, it's operational cost. IE down time costs, user issues, business needs.

                              Now Microsoft office is something that's heavily scrutinized in our company, it's a very bloated system. We don't touch most of the features, and the update cycle makes o365 & SA not worth it. Word and Excel forumluas and macro's is what's used most in our company. We are stuck to it right now because we pay Microsoft to use some DLLs in our own applications (some excel stuff), along with paying Adobe to use some of theirs.

                              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • MattSpellerM
                                MattSpeller
                                last edited by

                                If I ever move a business off of the Office suite I know that I will be shopping extensively for a training company. Training budget will probably exceed the cost of whatever email/office solution I go for.

                                J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • J
                                  Jason Banned @MattSpeller
                                  last edited by

                                  @MattSpeller said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                                  If I ever move a business off of the Office suite I know that I will be shopping extensively for a training company. Training budget will probably exceed the cost of whatever email/office solution I go for.

                                  If they just use basic word processing features they want notice a difference hardly. It's when you get people doing macro's and forumla's that's the problem.

                                  DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 2
                                  • DashrenderD
                                    Dashrender @Jason
                                    last edited by

                                    @Jason said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                                    @MattSpeller said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                                    If I ever move a business off of the Office suite I know that I will be shopping extensively for a training company. Training budget will probably exceed the cost of whatever email/office solution I go for.

                                    If they just use basic word processing features they want notice a difference hardly. It's when you get people doing macro's and forumla's that's the problem.

                                    The bigger issue from my perspective is formatting. I tried converting 7 years ago - formatting was what killed us. Could it have been overcome, sure. But management decided against it.

                                    I find myself in this situation again. I want to move to O365, but SharePoint doesn't handle DOC, XLS - i.e. old versions well. Converting them in general will be simple - we barely use macros. Fun times ahead.

                                    J 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                    • J
                                      Jason Banned @Dashrender
                                      last edited by

                                      @Dashrender said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                                      The bigger issue from my perspective is formatting. I tried converting 7 years ago - formatting was what killed us. Could it have been overcome, sure. But management decided against it.

                                      DOCX XLSX are open standards and pretty much universal across office suites.

                                      DashrenderD 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • DashrenderD
                                        Dashrender @Jason
                                        last edited by

                                        @Jason said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                                        @Dashrender said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                                        The bigger issue from my perspective is formatting. I tried converting 7 years ago - formatting was what killed us. Could it have been overcome, sure. But management decided against it.

                                        DOCX XLSX are open standards and pretty much universal across office suites.

                                        That's what I read about opening DOC and XLS files in OpenOffice 7 years ago yet the visual output was nearly useless requiring massive formatting updates.

                                        I can only hope that once things are upgraded to the XML versions that these problems will be left behind.

                                        J coliverC 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • J
                                          Jason Banned @Dashrender
                                          last edited by

                                          @Dashrender said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                                          That's what I read about opening DOC and XLS files in OpenOffice 7 years ago yet the visual output was nearly useless requiring massive formatting updates.

                                          No it's not what you read. Doc and XLS was never an open standard. It was a closed specification. The OpenXML formats were designed from the ground up to be open.

                                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                          • coliverC
                                            coliver @Dashrender
                                            last edited by

                                            @Dashrender said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                                            @Jason said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                                            @Dashrender said in Let's all get blindsided together!:

                                            The bigger issue from my perspective is formatting. I tried converting 7 years ago - formatting was what killed us. Could it have been overcome, sure. But management decided against it.

                                            DOCX XLSX are open standards and pretty much universal across office suites.

                                            That's what I read about opening DOC and XLS files in OpenOffice 7 years ago yet the visual output was nearly useless requiring massive formatting updates.

                                            I can only hope that once things are upgraded to the XML versions that these problems will be left behind.

                                            Nope, doc and xls were a closed format. They didn't translate well because no one had access to the way Microsoft read those formats. Docx and xlsx are XML based and the standard is open. 7 years is a crazy long time in IT... I'm not saying it will be perfect but you will have better luck today then you did in the ancient history you are referring to.

                                            DashrenderD 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
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