Ideas to better setup a small non-profit
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I was thinking Colo too, but if you don't NEED the server, ditch it. With that few of machines, just have them get updates from MS directly (or buy something like inTune to mange them) and save the files to the cloud somewhere.
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@Dashrender said:
I was thinking Colo too, but if you don't NEED the server, ditch it. With that few of machines, just have them get updates from MS directly (or buy something like inTune to mange them) and save the files to the cloud somewhere.
Right this is really good advice. I just don't know Canadian hosting... the only experience with it I have is C@C.
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@coliver yeah C@C is hopefully not a representative sample
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@MattSpeller said:
@coliver nothing essentially. DHCP will move to the fortigate, file storage to cloud (which has Canada rule related crap but I mention it only to vent my spleen at the rules before having to follow them), printers will go directly to IP
I'd kill off the server then, just getting in the way it sounds like.
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@coliver said:
You could also look at Pertino and a collocated server if they can't get hosting inside Canada. Although not sure if that would break any laws/rules either not sure if Pertino has a Canadian node
It does but I don't believe that they can guarantee it.
Hosting definitely exists inside Canada, don't you know CloudatCost?
I kid, I kid.
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@scottalanmiller Exactly the plan, but they don't have money to pay for much of a cloud. I will investigate O365 to see if we can get a killer deal from techsoup.
Turns out they also have a minor access DB, which makes me sad. Should be a good test of a cloud though.
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@MattSpeller said:
@scottalanmiller Exactly the plan, but they don't have money to pay for much of a cloud. I will investigate O365 to see if we can get a killer deal from techsoup.
Turns out they also have a minor access DB, which makes me sad. Should be a good test of a cloud though.
O365 can host access databases.
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@coliver well that was easy then
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Office 365 E1 is completely free for non profits. Skip tech soup and go direct.
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The article is mis-leading
"Office 365, one of the leading solutions for bringing your back office to the cloud, is now available at a discount for nonprofits and charities in Canada."Errr, most of the plans are in fact free.
http://www.microsoft.com/about/corporatecitizenship/en-us/office365-for-nonprofits/ -
@Breffni-Potter said:
The article is mis-leading
"Office 365, one of the leading solutions for bringing your back office to the cloud, is now available at a discount for nonprofits and charities in Canada."Errr, most of the plans are in fact free.
http://www.microsoft.com/about/corporatecitizenship/en-us/office365-for-nonprofits/Free is just the ultimate level of discount
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@Breffni-Potter said:
The article is mis-leading
"Office 365, one of the leading solutions for bringing your back office to the cloud, is now available at a discount for nonprofits and charities in Canada."Errr, most of the plans are in fact free.
http://www.microsoft.com/about/corporatecitizenship/en-us/office365-for-nonprofits/Good to know.
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@Breffni-Potter said:
Office 365 E1 is completely free for non profits. Skip tech soup and go direct.
Or if you weren't in Canada, go through NTG. We handle lots of non-profits free accounts too.
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@coliver said:
@MattSpeller said:
@scottalanmiller Exactly the plan, but they don't have money to pay for much of a cloud. I will investigate O365 to see if we can get a killer deal from techsoup.
Turns out they also have a minor access DB, which makes me sad. Should be a good test of a cloud though.
O365 can host access databases.
Yup, it puts the backend on SQL Server and the frontend on Sharepoint.
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This bit makes me cringe:
"Before you can gain access to Office 365’s donated E1 plan, your organization needs to meet Microsoft’s eligibility requirements. Microsoft, with help from TechSoup Canada, evaluates your eligibility during the 30-day E3 trial period. Approvals can take 1-4 weeks, but the process will be faster for organizations already registered with TechSoup Canada."
I don't know about Canada, but we got approval within a few days. No need for a third party. I suspect they word it like this because tech soup get brownie points from MS.
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@Breffni-Potter said:
Office 365 E1 is completely free for non profits. Skip tech soup and go direct.
The article wasn't telling you to use techsoup to get 0365 they don't offer it. It's an information article.
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@Breffni-Potter said:
This bit makes me cringe:
"Before you can gain access to Office 365’s donated E1 plan, your organization needs to meet Microsoft’s eligibility requirements. Microsoft, with help from TechSoup Canada, evaluates your eligibility during the 30-day E3 trial period. Approvals can take 1-4 weeks, but the process will be faster for organizations already registered with TechSoup Canada."
I don't know about Canada, but we got approval within a few days. No need for a third party. I suspect they word it like this because tech soup get brownie points from MS.
Canada is absolutely evil for business to work in. There is no amount of profit that makes it worth doing business there. They screw their own people left and right. Worst working environment I know. Nice place to live if you are wealthy and don't need to work. But if you have to run a business, stay away.
Every technology thing, from getting a server, to regulations, to taxes, to licensing is a unique challenge there.
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@thecreativeone91 said:
The article wasn't telling you to use techsoup to get 0365 they don't offer it. It's an information article.
I think the wording generally encourages you to use Tech Soup, Especially when you read points 4, 6 and 9
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@Breffni-Potter TechSoup is a savoir of our business (and many other NP's I'm sure)