Axigen X Released
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Wait, your site says 10 accounts including email and calendar, and 20 just further below.
Which is it?
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10 premium users + 10 basic users
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@aaronstuder said:
10 premium users + 10 basic users
Even less valuable
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So why not just configure any linux email server and have unlimited users, on an open source platform, with all of the above functionality?
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So my main question is... taking a quick glance at this product it falls into the "who cares" category for me. I see nothing good about it on the surface and nothing to cause me to look any deeper. What's the proposed value? It's up against software that is fully free, way safer to use and has huge user bases and decades of refinement. What made you look at this software and not immediately browse away?
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@scottalanmiller @DustinB3403 What are you guys comparing this to?
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@scottalanmiller Doesn't NTG using Office 365? Why aren't you just using Linux?
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@aaronstuder said:
@scottalanmiller @DustinB3403 What are you guys comparing this to?
The only things you would... Zimbra and similar. The products that this is being marketed against... for people who hate open source.
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@scottalanmiller the topic you address is valid and wide. On the other hand, why would commercial closed source exist anyway? Our product can be trialed for 30 days - no feature limitation. Should you be interested in an in-depth analysis on how Axigen could benefit a SP, I would be more than glad to chat/skype with you.
Bogdan Moldovan -
@aaronstuder said:
@scottalanmiller Doesn't NTG using Office 365? Why aren't you just using Linux?
Huh? I don't even understand the question.
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@axigen said:
@scottalanmiller the topic you address is valid and wide. On the other hand, why would commercial closed source exist anyway?
That's a valid question, and my answer would be... I don't know? Why would anyone choose closed source software when open source already exists that covers the same ground? Closed source is always a negative for the customer. So for closed source to compete, it must compete on ground that open source doesn't cover, or go for really clueless customers.
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@aaronstuder said:
@scottalanmiller Doesn't NTG using Office 365? Why aren't you just using Linux?
You are comparing a subscription licensing system to an operating system. The distance between these two things are pretty huge.
I've written extensively about why I believe in email being a commodity and should be hosted 99% of the time. Are you asking why we continue to believe in hosted email? That's a valid question, but wholly unrelated to the situation being discussed in this thread.
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@scottalanmiller My point is NTG uses Office365 for email, correct? Isn't that closed source? Why don't you just use Linux?
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@scottalanmiller said:
Closed source is always a negative for the customer. So for closed source to compete, it must compete on ground that open source doesn't cover, or go for really clueless customers.
First of all I do appreciate and respect your preference!
A closed source brings various benefits: Commercial Support (in various levels), Managed Services, On-demand integrations, Professional Services, etc. There are customers (and I would refrain from calling them clueless) that value these. -
@axigen said:
@scottalanmiller said:
Closed source is always a negative for the customer. So for closed source to compete, it must compete on ground that open source doesn't cover, or go for really clueless customers.
First of all I do appreciate and respect your preference!
A closed source brings various benefits: Commercial Support (in various levels), Managed Services, On-demand integrations, Professional Services, etc. There are customers (and I would refrain from calling them clueless) that value these.None of those things are brought by closed source, that's totally incorrect. Open source does all of those equally. The ONLY difference is in value and protections to the customers.
The customers that think that that is the value have to be clueless as all of that is wrong. Very, very confused customers.
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@aaronstuder said:
@scottalanmiller My point is NTG uses Office365 for email, correct? Isn't that closed source? Why don't you just use Linux?
We don't use SOFTWARE for email, we use a service. You are totally confusing service with product here.
You are also confusing Linux with Zimbra and Office 365 with Exchange.
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@scottalanmiller said:
We don't use SOFTWARE for email, we use a service. You are totally confusing service with product here.
No, I am not confused, your nit picking wording.
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Linux is not an email system, it is an operating system.
Are you saying that Axigen is a hosted service and not software? If so, why is their only selling point that I noticed on the site that they are an "alternative to open source?"
Not only is that what they have on their site, but they are promoting it here (with all incorrect information) which totally supports my theory that there wasn't any benefit to the software and that they are depending on customers that are idiots and think open source means something very different than it does.
Which is bizarre because they also tout that they run on Linux... which is open source. So why would someone who is willing to buy a product for the sole purpose of avoiding open source choose one that is closed... but depends on open source?
Something very odd there.
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@scottalanmiller said:
None of those things are brought by closed source, that's totally incorrect. Open source does all of those equally. The ONLY difference is in value and protections to the customers.
The customers that think that that is the value have to be clueless as all of that is wrong. Very, very confused customers.
I wonder, how much would be the services that we are taking about from Zimbra. You may know, as I do not! So value is to be observed when looking more in-depth not when skimming an offer.
It is your personal choice to label value on skimming techniques.
They may work well for you and may not be a good fit for others. -
@aaronstuder said:
@scottalanmiller said:
We don't use SOFTWARE for email, we use a service. You are totally confusing service with product here.
No, I am not confused, your nit picking wording.
Not in the slightest. The gap here is enormous. We do NOT buy proprietary email software, we buy a service. The licensing of the service is of zero interest to us because even if it was open source and running on Linux it would not mean that the source was available to us.
Calling this nit picking means you've missed the entire conversation.