We Don't Have the Budget to Save Money
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I cannot believe how often I see a thread of people talking about how they have done something ridiculous in their systems design and when people ask about it the excuses of "we are a tiny company" or "we are a non-profit" or "we have a tight budget" come up as an excuse as to why they didn't do something more expensive. Fine.
But nearly always the question is "why did you spend so much money on such a bad design when something costing half as much would have been way better? I pretty much assume, these days, that almost anytime that someone claims that they don't have enough money to do something right that they have spent more money than the proposed solution and are either so out of touch with what they are doing that they didn't realize that they were wasting money or they have gotten so used to excusing any action as being based on "someone else's failure to provide financing" that they never take responsibility for bad decision making.
I see this every few days and it drives me crazy.
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The situation that just came up was someone who bought six "desktop class" servers without RAID cards for a non-profit and claimed that they could not afford hardware RAID because they had no money. Yes they could afford six servers when a single server, with a real RAID card, would have been safer, faster, cheaper and easier than the six servers that they bought. The problem of not having enough money was created because they wasted more money than was needed and then ran out.
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I think the costs associated with more labor, more upkeep, more overall administration of a solution moving forward often get overlooked when decision makers begin to see how much money comes out of the bank account. The long-term costs are often not communicated to the big boys well, not communicated at all, or just flat out ignored.
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@scottalanmiller said:
The situation that just came up was someone who bought six "desktop class" servers without RAID cards for a non-profit and claimed that they could not afford hardware RAID because they had no money. Yes they could afford six servers when a single server, with a real RAID card, would have been safer, faster, cheaper and easier than the six servers that they bought. The problem of not having enough money was created because they wasted more money than was needed and then ran out.
I'd point fingers, but holy cow. Having worked at a Non Profit for the last nine years, I very much feel your pain. It is also what I'm resolving now.
I can not understand why someone would buy SIX servers when one would do,..(as you said) -Of course I could toss out the customary - Need a backup.. so two would be nice.
But still.. wow.
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I'd guess it's a lack of experience, being lead by vendors and ridiculous software requirements.
The person who installed this probably didn't know about or really understand virtualization, they looked at the hardware requirements of the solution management wanted - it said they needed 6 boxes, so they called the vendor who suggested these 6 desktop class servers without RAID.
As Scott already mentioned - this type of thing happens all the time.
An associate of mine was hired into a school district and give the funds needed to upgrade their server hardware. He called a vendor who sold them a 1 server VM solution that uses a SAN. That was $15-20K they definitely didn't need to spend, and actually puts them in more harms way than they were in before. I didn't learn about his setup until well after it was completed, so I couldn't point him here (or SW as this was years ago) so we could gather some really good free advice.
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How much did they spend? I've bought HP's super-budget Proliant servers for less than $200 in the past. So six of those would come in at $1200. If you know nothing about virtualisation and would have to learn, then six budget servers could, in theory, work out cheaper. And how unreliable is HP's software RAID, anyway?
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@scottalanmiller said:
The situation that just came up was someone who bought six "desktop class" servers without RAID cards for a non-profit and claimed that they could not afford hardware RAID because they had no money. Yes they could afford six servers when a single server, with a real RAID card, would have been safer, faster, cheaper and easier than the six servers that they bought. The problem of not having enough money was created because they wasted more money than was needed and then ran out.
Yeah, that situation sounds way too familiar. A similar excuse was made at a non-profit I used to work for when I brought up the need to begin virtualizing servers. I would always have to listen to the network manager complain about how hard their job was, how much they had to manually patch, backup, etc etc. The moment I talked about ESXi it was shot down so quickly because "Can't afford a SAN, you HAVE TO HAVE A SAN to do virtualization." and then did everything they could to torpedo the idea to upper management. Frustrating.
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@NetworkNerd said:
I think the costs associated with more labor, more upkeep, more overall administration of a solution moving forward often get overlooked when decision makers begin to see how much money comes out of the bank account. The long-term costs are often not communicated to the big boys well, not communicated at all, or just flat out ignored.
That part is ALWAYS overlooked in my experience too. No one seems to want to factor those costs in or they conveniently leave those out so they can justify their lack of willingness to evolve in their positions.
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@Bill-Kindle said:
"you HAVE TO HAVE A SAN to do virtualization."
I've heard this loads of times. It must be one of the biggest myths in IT. I'm not sure where it came from, the SAN vendors or somewhere else? Whatever, a lot of IT pros think it's true.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
@Bill-Kindle said:
"you HAVE TO HAVE A SAN to do virtualization."
I've heard this loads of times. It must be one of the biggest myths in IT. I'm not sure where it came from, the SAN vendors or somewhere else? Whatever, a lot of IT pros think it's true.
All I know is that when I laughed at them for continuing to claim that, they became irate.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
@Bill-Kindle said:
"you HAVE TO HAVE A SAN to do virtualization."
I've heard this loads of times. It must be one of the biggest myths in IT. I'm not sure where it came from, the SAN vendors or somewhere else? Whatever, a lot of IT pros think it's true.
This is the number one myth that was shattered for me when I joined SW. Thanks to Scott.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
How much did they spend? I've bought HP's super-budget Proliant servers for less than $200 in the past. So six of those would come in at $1200. If you know nothing about virtualisation and would have to learn, then six budget servers could, in theory, work out cheaper. And how unreliable is HP's software RAID, anyway?
In this case it was not HP, it was Dell. Same difference, just saying. But Dell does not have the equivalent of the $200 HP MicroServer. Their entry level is basically a $600 - $800 desktop unit. There is no way that six of them was anywhere nearly as cheap as a single slightly better unit with hardware RAID.
And the software RAID not working is what brought the topic up. Third party awkward software RAID that both HP and Dell offer is not something you would ever want to run in production, maybe a lab but even then I would shy away from it. It's not Fake RAID, but it isn't integrated OS RAID either. It is still a third party driver with compatibility risks and relatively little support as no serious business uses it - it's the "red headed stepchild" of RAID solutions so while it is generally supported, it is not supported well and gets little attention. It's really a "failing SMB" solution only, not something that the vendor's profit making customers are using so little reason for them to really care.
But even if in theory the software RAID solution was good in this case (there is a reason why this only exists for Windows and if you were running any other OS on the same hardware that you would use the OS RAID instead) it was specifically the inability to get the software RAID to keep working and to get support for it that created the discussion.
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Again, in theory, I could imagine a situation where an IT guy needs new servers and has a tiny budget. He thinks about virtualistation, but doesn't really know much about it. So he contacts a couple of IT vendors and asks them to quote. All their quotes contain SANs and are thus eye-wateringly expensive. Some of them tell him he needs TWO SANs for redundancy. If the cost of buying two SANs doesn't put him off, the diagram of the swiches would - there's cables everywhere. And the labour just to set the SANs up! I can see why he might think virtualisation just isn't an option.
Now I know you'll say that's why you shouldn't get advice from a vendor, but paid, independent advice isn't cheap either. This is where Spiceworks rocks, I get tons of advice from an NTG consultant and I don't pay a penny for it, but not everyone knows about that! Generally, getting advice from forums can be extremely hit and miss, and you need to be fairly experienced to tell the expert advice from the bullshit - not everyone is.
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@Carnival-Boy said:
Now I know you'll say that's why you shouldn't get advice from a vendor, but paid, independent advice isn't cheap either.
$200 is cheap compared to wasting thousands in up front purchasing, being at risk from not assessing needs and putting the company at product risk for the entire server cycle until it is refreshed, though. Good paid consulting for a tiny firm isn't necessary that expensive. You just don't command the schedule as much at that price (not like you are scheduling a full day.)
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@Carnival-Boy said:
This is where Spiceworks rocks, I get tons of advice from an NTG consultant and I don't pay a penny for it, but not everyone knows about that! Generally, getting advice from forums can be extremely hit and miss, and you need to be fairly experienced to tell the expert advice from the bullshit - not everyone is.
And MangoLassi (cough, cough). But yeah, there are tons of awesome consulting firms and consultants who give advice freely in the public space. There are many options to getting advice out there when it is needed.
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This mentality is way too common. Anything that people do not know is labeled as "too expensive." And then shops who don't hire good IT talent wonder why everything that they do costs so much. There is a reason that good IT people cost real money, because they save real money (or drive innovation.) Not every company needs expensive IT in house all of the time, but everyone needs it now and then.
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@scottalanmiller Speaking of which, here's another example:
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@Bill-Kindle said:
"Can't afford a SAN, you HAVE TO HAVE A SAN to do virtualization." and then did everything they could to torpedo the idea to upper management. Frustrating.
Wow. I've never actually used my SANs for Virtualization.. Just don't like the eggs all in one basket as they say.
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@ajstringham said:
@Bill-Kindle said:
@scottalanmiller Speaking of which, here's another example:
Wow...
It's a rough one. I had not seen it until it was linked here.