Burned by Eschewing Best Practices
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It gets even worse, the SAN has only 5TB of storage, who the hell was the sales rep raping while selling this system...
Like WTF... 5TB...
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@scottalanmiller said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
Had to share this one, it's unreal. Dell charging $2700 PER DRIVE for cheap, $200 hard drives. We expect a premium, but that is insane.
https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/1733428-vmware-nas-suggestions?page=4#entry-6045504
It's more of just a warning about what storage vendors will potentially do to you if they think that you are a trapped audience with no other options. Or if they think that your management are suckers. Or worse.
It's not really a best practice issue, but didn't know where else to put a horror story of this nature and the dangers of prop solutions is real.
This guy had me at pixie dust and dreams
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@scottalanmiller said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
Had to share this one, it's unreal. Dell charging $2700 PER DRIVE for cheap, $200 hard drives. We expect a premium, but that is insane.
https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/1733428-vmware-nas-suggestions?page=4#entry-6045504
It's more of just a warning about what storage vendors will potentially do to you if they think that you are a trapped audience with no other options. Or if they think that your management are suckers. Or worse.
It's not really a best practice issue, but didn't know where else to put a horror story of this nature and the dangers of prop solutions is real.
I'm hoping that the person who had this issue posts over here, too. But he followed up with me that they saved tens of thousands of dollars and got a better solution by building a SAM-SD to replace the Equalogic.
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@scottalanmiller said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@scottalanmiller said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
Had to share this one, it's unreal. Dell charging $2700 PER DRIVE for cheap, $200 hard drives. We expect a premium, but that is insane.
https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/1733428-vmware-nas-suggestions?page=4#entry-6045504
It's more of just a warning about what storage vendors will potentially do to you if they think that you are a trapped audience with no other options. Or if they think that your management are suckers. Or worse.
It's not really a best practice issue, but didn't know where else to put a horror story of this nature and the dangers of prop solutions is real.
I'm hoping that the person who had this issue posts over here, too. But he followed up with me that they saved tens of thousands of dollars and got a better solution by building a SAM-SD to replace the Equalogic.
My next project involved a SAM-SD
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I'm working on one that if it didn't have to be on a state contract would have been built and in place by now! (Also would have likely been a SAM-SD)
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My father in law (soon to be) just received my server! yessssssssssss @BradfromxByte
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@wirestyle22 When's the funera^H^H^H^H^H^H wedding?
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@dafyre It's a murder suicide. more romantic
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**** Dell!
This weekend if I get a chance (gonna be busy grading my back yard for a new garage and 12kw solar array I'm building), I'll cut together the LOOOOOOOOOONG line of deranged emails that went between myself, Dell, and my PCM rep. Some of them... well, I got pretty snarky in. Needless to say, those tool bags went running with their tails between their legs and in the end stopped responding.
Most of my problem is that I'd been out of IT for a while and deep in the heavy construction and asphalt manufacturing industry as a plant tech. Out there, when someone tries to smooth talk you and treats you like you're a sucker, you tell them to **** OFF and you get in their face about it. So I've been trying to tone it down a few notches now that I'm back in a slightly more civilized industry. But it's REALLY hard when you get down to business with 95% of people that work for Dell. They are literally asshat extraordinaires, second only to Lenovo asshat extraordinaires. My first account rep from Dell was seriously the only guy I ever got along with there (Travis Best), he was awesome and got promoted the next year, and it was all downhill from there from one dumbass to the next.
So yeah, we bought a R510 from Mike at xByte for a little over $4k, made it our 3rd esx host with 48TB of local storage instead of pointing it at the two eql arrays on the production rack. Moved UEB9 to it, and are in the process of moving the DR eql array to the production rack.
So, instead of spending $33k (really $11k after I flipped a shit at the quote me and my PCM rep were given from Dell and they backed it down and we did a deal registration) ((22,000 DOLLAR ****ING PRICE REDUCTION BY GETTING PISSED OVER ONLY ONE EMAIL?!??!?!?!?! WHAT THE ****!)) We ended up with an extra R610 host that I can now use to build our new infrastructure for a company split/merger/restructuring/etc that we're in process with, don't have 12TB of eql drives collecting dust on a shelf, got 48TB of backup storage, doubled backup speeds (R510 has much faster clocks and UEB is single threaded), and a bunch of other little bonuses.
All for a little over $4k. Don't know what I'd do without you guys like @scottalanmiller pushing us to think a little outside the box and not get pushed around by SAN/NAS/general vendors who have their bottom line as what's best for the customer.
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@eneeldssi welcome to the community and thanks for jumping in here!
We keep Dell at an arms length via xByte for all things as well. Dell direct reps are terrible.
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@eneeldssi I've got a brand new next gen machine from them once because I complained about their support regarding a very ugly bug where onboard NICs stopped working after an unpredictable amount of time when running ESXi. Has been escalated over 6 or 7 instances over the course of 3 months. Can't tell you the exact sum, but it was a little above the price of a Snickers plus shipping.
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@thwr that's pretty awesome. A pretty nice "sorry" prize.
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@scottalanmiller said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@thwr that's pretty awesome. A pretty nice "sorry" prize.
Yepp, must admit that. But it was a really ugly situation. I've bought the original machine with 4 hours on-site and it took them nearly 3 months to get it fixed. So the prize might be cool, but a lawsuit would have been much more expensive I guess.
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@thwr said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@scottalanmiller said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@thwr that's pretty awesome. A pretty nice "sorry" prize.
Yepp, must admit that. But it was a really ugly situation. I've bought the original machine with 4 hours on-site and it took them nearly 3 months to get it fixed. So the prize might be cool, but a lawsuit would have been much more expensive I guess.
True, that's a bunch of crap. But at least you got something nice out of it.
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@eneeldssi Great examples of Why we don't take advice from vendors., no, really, never, ever.
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@travisdh1 said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@eneeldssi Great examples of Why we don't take advice from vendors., no, really, never, ever.
I get the same "look" when offering advice for free, as a completely outside party. As if I'm not a vendor or reseller my advice must be skewed.
How do you guys recommend getting around this kind of stubbornness?
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@DustinB3403 said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@travisdh1 said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@eneeldssi Great examples of Why we don't take advice from vendors., no, really, never, ever.
I get the same "look" when offering advice for free, as a completely outside party. As if I'm not a vendor or reseller my advice must be skewed.
How do you guys recommend getting around this kind of stubbornness?
I ask questions that show them the error of their ways.
User: Did you break my computer?
Me: Do you accuse your mechanic of breaking your car when you bring it in to get fixed? -
@wirestyle22 said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@DustinB3403 said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@travisdh1 said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@eneeldssi Great examples of Why we don't take advice from vendors., no, really, never, ever.
I get the same "look" when offering advice for free, as a completely outside party. As if I'm not a vendor or reseller my advice must be skewed.
How do you guys recommend getting around this kind of stubbornness?
I ask questions that show them the error of their ways.
User: Did you break my computer?
Me: Do you accuse your mechanic of breaking your car when you bring it in to get fixed?As good as an example as that is, it's not the same scenario of advice offering. If an SMB was having a conversation with a vendor and I happen to be there, and over hear the conversation. I'm then tagged to answer some questions, but my responses have the "oh you're insane" face.
When my proposal comes in for far under what the vendor might be proposing.
Using the classic IPOD spew, I've been asked to sit in and listen, and when asked to respond and I call the proposal a pile of horse waste, I'm the one getting the dirty stares from the person who might actually be buying the horse pile.
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@DustinB3403 said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@wirestyle22 said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@DustinB3403 said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@travisdh1 said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@eneeldssi Great examples of Why we don't take advice from vendors., no, really, never, ever.
I get the same "look" when offering advice for free, as a completely outside party. As if I'm not a vendor or reseller my advice must be skewed.
How do you guys recommend getting around this kind of stubbornness?
I ask questions that show them the error of their ways.
User: Did you break my computer?
Me: Do you accuse your mechanic of breaking your car when you bring it in to get fixed?As good as an example as that is, it's not the same scenario of advice offering. If an SMB was having a conversation with a vendor and I happen to be there, and over hear the conversation. I'm then tagged to answer some questions, but my responses have the "oh you're insane" face.
When my proposal comes in for far under what the vendor might be proposing.
Using the classic IPOD spew, I've been asked to sit in and listen, and when asked to respond and I call the proposal a pile of horse waste, I'm the one getting the dirty stares from the person who might actually be buying the horse pile.
In that scenario you can't really expect to teach a paranoid business owner. There are still people in the world that think spending more money equals a better product. We can't change the world. I just wish those people luck and go on about my way. Not having expectations benefits you in these situations I find.
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@DustinB3403 said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@travisdh1 said in Burned by Eschewing Best Practices:
@eneeldssi Great examples of Why we don't take advice from vendors., no, really, never, ever.
I get the same "look" when offering advice for free, as a completely outside party. As if I'm not a vendor or reseller my advice must be skewed.
How do you guys recommend getting around this kind of stubbornness?
Talking to rational people.