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    Best posts made by Dragon3303

    • RE: Using a Snom PA1 for paging

      @jaredbusch

      I ran across this post in searching for some information in hooking up an SNOM PA1 to an amp that I inherited in a building setup here and I'm still confused in my particular situation after looking at the picture you provided. There was a crown amplifier that was already in place and two speakers (70v speakers) in the shop area hooked to that and I want to hook the SNOM PA1 to that amp to page over the loudspeakers, but I'm unsure if I need an impedance adapter or something between the SNOM and the amp. Here's picture of the back of the amp:

      (0_1535406299960_crown amp.jpg

      If I hook a traditional speaker up via the line out on the SNOM I'm able to hear everything as I would expect when paging over that speaker, but do you have any advice as to what the hookup to the amp would look like? Would I need an adapter that splits line out to either input 2 or 3? Or something else entirely? Thanks.

      posted in IT Discussion
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      Dragon3303
    • RE: Using a Snom PA1 for paging

      Sounds good...I'll give it whirl and see what happens. Thanks!

      posted in IT Discussion
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      Dragon3303
    • RE: Need MS Access app re-written to something else.

      @scottalanmiller said in Need MS Access app re-written to something else.:

      @pete-s said in Need MS Access app re-written to something else.:

      @JasGot

      Also if I wanted to have this project done, I wouldn't waste my time trying to make some kind of program specification. Or make up answers for every possible question that the might come up. Or even figure out what hardware, software, database, programming language etc to use.

      Use the developers expertise instead. Part of every project is to figure out what the goal, scope and expectations are and also potential problems and alternative solutions. The developer should be able to ask what he/she needs to know to accomplish your goals with the project. And come up with a solution for you.

      Many customers waste their time trying to come up with some kind of specification that is not relevant or just completely unusable.

      Yes, totally agreed. That stuff is for the engineers, not the customers. If I want a bridge built, I just have to know from where and to where and what kind of traffic it needs to handle. Trying to decide on the building materials and design is 100% wasted by me. A year of me doing research would not yield anything usable and a real engineer would throw out my work in the first 30 seconds and in two hours have real answers ready when I just wasted a year for nothing.

      So I'm a little confused here...Are you saying that it's not an IT issue that @JasGot is trying to solve here? If one of your customers came to you with this exact question, you would tell them that they need to find a software engineer to get them their answer? Or do you employee software engineers that would tell you how they would move that solution off of Windows and MS Access to a different platform?

      posted in IT Business
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      Dragon3303
    • RE: On prem Exchange hardware questions.

      @scottalanmiller said in On prem Exchange hardware questions.:

      @siringo said in On prem Exchange hardware questions.:

      I did the maths and it worked out it would take them 4 -5 years on Office 365 before they would reach what they had to outlay for new server h/w, licensing etc. And the other thing was, that at that 4 year point, they may be starting to look at replacing h/w and O/S again, so moving to the cloud (O365) won out.

      Exactly, it is a RARE shop that can make on prem cost less than cloud, even with O365 - unless the on prem is cutting a lot of corners, which can be perfectly acceptable depending on the business. At 100 users, that's $400/mo or $4800/year. Not very much considering what you get.

      To do that on premises you need a moderate server, nothing crazy, but can't be some old junk just lying around. And to be anything like O365, you'd need at least two servers, not necessary in an HA cluster, but immediately available secondary hardware absolutely. So figure at least $6K for one server, $12K for the pair.

      Now add licensing. That's Windows Server and Exchange licenses, then CALs and Exchange CALs. That's many thousands right there. That'll like take you to around $18K or more, and being on the skimpy side at this point.

      Now we have to add HVAC and electrical costs for on prem, which isn't huge, but will be hundreds or thousands a year that people tend to overlook.

      And now the IT costs. Running those servers, doing updates, supporting them when there is an outage. That stuff adds up, quickly. There's realistically no way that you can do this for under $500/mo and at some point you are getting a full time admin just for this and anyone qualified will be at least $90K a year in loaded costs! We'll ignore what you are "likely to need" and focus on the $500/mo which is $6K a year - just realistically no way to get below that with two Exchange servers, all of the associated infrastructure just for that, patches, updates, hardware, etc.

      That puts it at $24K for that first year to have even a modicum of comparability to O365 and doesn't even begin to address things like enterprise hosting or redundant ISPs or anything like that. Figure you will pay that every five years, except the IT cost is annual. So add another 4 years at $6K and that's $30K over 5 years or $6K per year...

      That makes it, ignoring all HVAC and electrical costs, real estate costs, ISP costs.... at least $1200/year more than O365 while getting quite a bit less in most cases. If you don't care about uptime or risks, you can shave a lot of costs off of that but only by not trying to match O365 in any way. Which is perfectly fine if that works for your business. But apples to apples, you might be able to match O365 somewhere north of 200 users, but only by taking on risks for trivial savings.

      Now if you have thousands of users, of course, it's worth evaluating. But at thousands of users, MS will cut you some slack on the O365 price, too.

      I'm confused...Didn't you just say a few posts ago that you agree that cloud is almost never cheaper? And now you say in this post that it's a rare shop that can make cloud cheaper than on-prem? I'm going through the same math and trying to decide which way to recommend for 75-80 users. We're pretty stuck with office due to how a couple of our teams use macros behind Excel for several things. Management folks would potentially like to take advantage of Teams and maybe SharePoint. So it may make sense. We already have all the hardware, hvac, ect. in place because we're already hosting multiple virtual host servers, so the infrastructure is good. We're also one of those places that hasn't had an Exchange outage (specific to the Exchange server) with our on-prem solution. We've had a couple extended power outages or Internet outages over the years, but nothing really to speak of. We've been on Exchange/Office 2010 until now because there's been really no compelling reason to change. The way it looks to me is at 75/80 users the costs over 6-7 years (if you keep your Exchange and Office suite that long) are then starting to equal out, and at that point you're probably looking to upgrade again with a large capital cost so it maybe makes sense to go Microsoft 365 and stay current, have access to Teams and Sharepoint, etc. But your statement on both sides of the aisle there (both on-prem and could almost always being cheaper) was kind of confusing to me.

      posted in IT Discussion
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      Dragon3303
    • RE: 75 User Exchange On Prem vs. Office 365 Cost Comparison

      One potential benefit to using Teams is that since it's included in the cost of the Microsoft Business Standard level is that it could maybe replace any other webmeeting/screen sharing software that is currently be used. I don't know that it's always that easy to get anonymous users in the Teams meeting however, so it may not fit the need for that. Our users have not had good experiences with Teams so far when they've had to interact with other organizations utilizing that.

      posted in IT Discussion
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      Dragon3303
    • RE: Hosted Phone System

      Excellent. Thank you guys. I'll pass the information on and hopefully they'll get in touch and get something good for them.

      posted in IT Discussion
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      Dragon3303
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