What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?
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@John-Nicholson One nice thing you get from using Softlayer for vSphere is you get a good mix of PaaS, mixed in with a HA/DRS available hosting for traditional app's that don't HA themselves.
There are a ton of applications out there with 10 users, that rebuilding the code for PaaS to do HA isn't worth it.
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@John-Nicholson said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@scottalanmiller Softlayers main product is bare metal, I'd argue its a fairly common use case.
That's just overpriced, poorly supported colo
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@scottalanmiller Softlayer will offer someone with a few hundred a month 24/7 service. If your wanting burst API driven bare metal with over 20 pops around the world who would you use?
Soft layer throws in monitoring, and free private transit between their pops so when comparing price to something else its kinda apples/oranges to look at raw costs vs. someone like AWS who charges per GB even between zones.
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@scottalanmiller said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@John-Nicholson said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@scottalanmiller said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@johnhooks said:
IBM doesn't.Cough Softlayer Cough.
In all seriousness they are a massive VMware shop. (Under VCAN, as well as customers just renting bare metal and putting ESXi on it).Only in their custom products, though. Same as Rackspace. Not in their top end public products, just the smaller private ones that are really just them managing customer environments. They don't use it when it is their own design.
Cloud@Cost made that mistake. It was a disaster.
It's funny. My system literally just came up again at cloud@cost when I was reading this post. Been offline with out a means of recovery for ~9 months. Wasn't important enough to open a ticket.
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@coliver said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@scottalanmiller said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@John-Nicholson said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@scottalanmiller said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@johnhooks said:
IBM doesn't.Cough Softlayer Cough.
In all seriousness they are a massive VMware shop. (Under VCAN, as well as customers just renting bare metal and putting ESXi on it).Only in their custom products, though. Same as Rackspace. Not in their top end public products, just the smaller private ones that are really just them managing customer environments. They don't use it when it is their own design.
Cloud@Cost made that mistake. It was a disaster.
It's funny. My system literally just came up again at cloud@cost when I was reading this post. Been offline with out a means of recovery for ~9 months. Wasn't important enough to open a ticket.
Nine months of outage. Impressive. That might be a new record.
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@John-Nicholson said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@scottalanmiller Softlayer will offer someone with a few hundred a month 24/7 service. If your wanting burst API driven bare metal with over 20 pops around the world who would you use?
Soft layer throws in monitoring, and free private transit between their pops so when comparing price to something else its kinda apples/oranges to look at raw costs vs. someone like AWS who charges per GB even between zones.
A few hundred for dedicated hardware? What kind of hardware is it? (Lenovo, I would fear.)
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@scottalanmiller said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@John-Nicholson said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@scottalanmiller Softlayer will offer someone with a few hundred a month 24/7 service. If your wanting burst API driven bare metal with over 20 pops around the world who would you use?
Soft layer throws in monitoring, and free private transit between their pops so when comparing price to something else its kinda apples/oranges to look at raw costs vs. someone like AWS who charges per GB even between zones.
A few hundred for dedicated hardware? What kind of hardware is it? (Lenovo, I would fear.)
Softlayer is a Dell shop, if I remember correctly.
We are a Dell blade shop. Big red V was an HP shop, although using Dell for everything else. Rackspace uses Dell AFAIK and other stuff, like Tyan white boxes for POWER.
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@PSX_Defector said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@scottalanmiller said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@John-Nicholson said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@scottalanmiller Softlayer will offer someone with a few hundred a month 24/7 service. If your wanting burst API driven bare metal with over 20 pops around the world who would you use?
Soft layer throws in monitoring, and free private transit between their pops so when comparing price to something else its kinda apples/oranges to look at raw costs vs. someone like AWS who charges per GB even between zones.
A few hundred for dedicated hardware? What kind of hardware is it? (Lenovo, I would fear.)
Softlayer is a Dell shop, if I remember correctly.
We are a Dell blade shop. Big red V was an HP shop, although using Dell for everything else. Rackspace uses Dell AFAIK and other stuff, like Tyan white boxes for POWER.
Softlayer / IBM is buying from Dell? While that would be awesome (Softlayer has no internal access to gear of Dell quality via its IBM channel since they only do Power gear) it seems very unlikely given that it's part of IBM and was for years before the Lenovo divestiture. IBM always seems to be so tied to Lenovo even after selling to them.
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The planet a really long time ago was a Dell shop (like8-10 years). Softlayer is a supermicro shop, and stayed that way after IBM bought them. Shortly after this IBM sold off the X servers.
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Thank you for voicing so eloquently what some of us have been trying to wrap our heads around. I personally come from a frugal era of IT and will always scout free solutions before coughing up the cash or subscribing to a (shudder) recurring licensing fee. We used to buy our modem banks by sniping eBay auctions, and that was at a tri-state telecom. I realize you need to spend money to make money, but unnecessary expenditures should still be avoid if possible, imo.
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@chrisnbrooks said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
Thank you for voicing so eloquently what some of us have been trying to wrap our heads around. I personally come from a frugal era of IT and will always scout free solutions before coughing up the cash or subscribing to a (shudder) recurring licensing fee. We used to buy our modem banks by sniping eBay auctions, and that was at a tri-state telecom. I realize you need to spend money to make money, but unnecessary expenditures should still be avoid if possible, imo.
XenServer + CentOS is a huge moneysaver. Virtualization period is a pretty big money saver.
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@John-Nicholson said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
The planet a really long time ago was a Dell shop (like8-10 years). Softlayer is a supermicro shop, and stayed that way after IBM bought them. Shortly after this IBM sold off the X servers.
I am, once again, down the street from them. It's been a long time.
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Are you guys actually going to be staying in Texas for a while or are you just checking to make sure the house is still standing?
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@dafyre said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
Are you guys actually going to be staying in Texas for a while or are you just checking to make sure the house is still standing?
Texas for two weeks to see family. Dallas for the weekend to party at the house.
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@scottalanmiller I'll be flying out of Love Field on Thursday.
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@brianlittlejohn said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@scottalanmiller I'll be flying out of Love Field on Thursday.
Nice, I can almost walk there from here. It's right down the road.
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@scottalanmiller Unfortunately it will be a 5 hour drive to get there for me.
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@brianlittlejohn said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
@scottalanmiller Unfortunately it will be a 5 hour drive to get there for me.
To be fair, it would be a five hour walk for me.
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@chrisnbrooks said in What is the Upside to VMware to the SMB?:
Thank you for voicing so eloquently what some of us have been trying to wrap our heads around. I personally come from a frugal era of IT and will always scout free solutions before coughing up the cash or subscribing to a (shudder) recurring licensing fee. We used to buy our modem banks by sniping eBay auctions, and that was at a tri-state telecom. I realize you need to spend money to make money, but unnecessary expenditures should still be avoid if possible, imo.
You're welcome