Alternatives for Microsoft server products
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@tonyshowoff said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@scottalanmiller said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@thwr said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
My major concern about using Microsoft software is not about the quality or the price. It's about managing all the licensing, which really is a PITA and nearly impossible to overcome for just a one or two men show.
I am often amazed to find SMBs unwilling to consider the licensing overhead aspects of software choices. It can represent a massive cost. When people talk about the "hidden" costs of open source, they normally mention things that are equal with closed source, but they universally overlook licensing which is the only unique cost between the two and often one of the largest.
"You git what you pay fer" - Every anti-Open Source salesman. Every once in a while I still hear that from regular IT people who shouldn't be in IT. It used to happen more often, about 15 years ago I used to constantly hear "Linux? You get what you pay for!" and of course quotes from Robert Heinlein novels about neoliberals on the Moon.
I heard this from financial VPs at a company I used to work for. Even when I would give a list of open source products that we used.
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@Dashrender said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@thwr said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
Your numbers may be correct for Open License, but I am on a Select 6.
That must be some education/government thing. I've heard the O365 pricing is lower, so that's good for you, all the more reason to go to it when possible. But I can understand if it's not.
There are many different levels of agreements and they aren't based on being education or government any plan besides open will be cheaper, and the higher you go up the cheaper it is.
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@coliver said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@tonyshowoff said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@scottalanmiller said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@thwr said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
My major concern about using Microsoft software is not about the quality or the price. It's about managing all the licensing, which really is a PITA and nearly impossible to overcome for just a one or two men show.
I am often amazed to find SMBs unwilling to consider the licensing overhead aspects of software choices. It can represent a massive cost. When people talk about the "hidden" costs of open source, they normally mention things that are equal with closed source, but they universally overlook licensing which is the only unique cost between the two and often one of the largest.
"You git what you pay fer" - Every anti-Open Source salesman. Every once in a while I still hear that from regular IT people who shouldn't be in IT. It used to happen more often, about 15 years ago I used to constantly hear "Linux? You get what you pay for!" and of course quotes from Robert Heinlein novels about neoliberals on the Moon.
I heard this from financial VPs at a company I used to work for. Even when I would give a list of open source products that we used.
that's when you come to NTG and ask us to "sell" any open source product that you need, at 20% above the cost of whatever closed source product you are looking at instead. Problem solved.
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@scottalanmiller said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@coliver said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@tonyshowoff said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@scottalanmiller said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@thwr said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
My major concern about using Microsoft software is not about the quality or the price. It's about managing all the licensing, which really is a PITA and nearly impossible to overcome for just a one or two men show.
I am often amazed to find SMBs unwilling to consider the licensing overhead aspects of software choices. It can represent a massive cost. When people talk about the "hidden" costs of open source, they normally mention things that are equal with closed source, but they universally overlook licensing which is the only unique cost between the two and often one of the largest.
"You git what you pay fer" - Every anti-Open Source salesman. Every once in a while I still hear that from regular IT people who shouldn't be in IT. It used to happen more often, about 15 years ago I used to constantly hear "Linux? You get what you pay for!" and of course quotes from Robert Heinlein novels about neoliberals on the Moon.
I heard this from financial VPs at a company I used to work for. Even when I would give a list of open source products that we used.
that's when you come to NTG and ask us to "sell" any open source product that you need, at 20% above the cost of whatever closed source product you are looking at instead. Problem solved.
Haha, oddly enough I did exactly that. Worked like a charm!
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@coliver said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@scottalanmiller said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@coliver said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@tonyshowoff said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@scottalanmiller said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
@thwr said in Alternatives for Microsoft server products:
My major concern about using Microsoft software is not about the quality or the price. It's about managing all the licensing, which really is a PITA and nearly impossible to overcome for just a one or two men show.
I am often amazed to find SMBs unwilling to consider the licensing overhead aspects of software choices. It can represent a massive cost. When people talk about the "hidden" costs of open source, they normally mention things that are equal with closed source, but they universally overlook licensing which is the only unique cost between the two and often one of the largest.
"You git what you pay fer" - Every anti-Open Source salesman. Every once in a while I still hear that from regular IT people who shouldn't be in IT. It used to happen more often, about 15 years ago I used to constantly hear "Linux? You get what you pay for!" and of course quotes from Robert Heinlein novels about neoliberals on the Moon.
I heard this from financial VPs at a company I used to work for. Even when I would give a list of open source products that we used.
that's when you come to NTG and ask us to "sell" any open source product that you need, at 20% above the cost of whatever closed source product you are looking at instead. Problem solved.
Haha, oddly enough I did exactly that. Worked like a charm!
Once "highest price means best deal" happens, all logic is out the window and some weird things happen.