The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3
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@scottalanmiller said
Maybe it was an assumption that that information was common, but it was pretty common when I first was introduced to it.
As the outsider looking in. None of their docs, marketing or website says that.
Now, I could "Look" at the box and go "That's a Dell chassis" and assume...but assumptions are dangerous. It could be a re-badged Acer under the hood.
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@Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:
Where can I buy parts for Scale systems? Can I keep spares on the shelf in the event of a failure ala hard drives?
Sure. You could order them from Scale and have spares on hand. I feel like doing that, though, means that you are attempting to overcompensate for an underspecced system, though. Under what condition do you feel having spare hard drives on the shelf would be necessary since the system is designed to protect you in such a way that you should not want to do that?
I feel like you are overthinking this... approaching it like you are a consultant and want to provide the mitigation that you get by buying a box like this (same with EMC or 3PAR systems.) You simply don't do that. The system is designed to protect you as is, you just spec it correctly and let it do its job. There are very special circumstances (if you were putting this on a cruise ship or Antarctica) but in general, it is designed specifically to make you not have to consider these things.
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@Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:
@scottalanmiller said
Maybe it was an assumption that that information was common, but it was pretty common when I first was introduced to it.
As the outsider looking in. None of their docs, marketing or website says that.
Now, I could "Look" at the box and go "That's a Dell chassis" and assume...but assumptions are dangerous. It could be a re-badged Acer under the hood.
Well advertising it would certainly encourage people to stop thinking of this as a management black box and make them start trying to do things that they should not be doing with an appliance. So I would not expect them to "push" the info, that would result in people trying to work around the closed system nature.
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@scottalanmiller said
You simply don't do that. The system is designed to protect you as is, you just spec it correctly and let it do its job.
Yes and as I said earlier 3 times, I understand that model and after looking at it it's a great looking product.
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@scottalanmiller said
I feel like you are overthinking this... approaching it like you are a consultant and want to provide the mitigation..
Actually no.
If I was an MSP, I'd love to do that. All the monthly fees, call out charges, oh revenues!
I want to recommend a box, put it in, have a happy customer and never touch it again but it needs to be bullet proof to do that.
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@Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:
@scottalanmiller said
You simply don't do that. The system is designed to protect you as is, you just spec it correctly and let it do its job.
Yes and as I said earlier 3 times, I understand that model and after looking at it it's a great looking product.
I think the problem is.... they can't address your "other" concerns without breaking that model themselves. If you talk to them, you can definitely find out what the hardware is (they talk about it in the speccing process), especially as drives have to be chosen for capacity and performance needs, and you can certainly ask to get spares or whatever. That's all just "ask your rep" kind of stuff, not things to have on their website, I don't think. You would feel that it was weird if you saw it there, I think.
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@Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:
@scottalanmiller said
I feel like you are overthinking this... approaching it like you are a consultant and want to provide the mitigation..
Actually no.
If I was an MSP, I'd love to do that. All the monthly fees, call out charges, oh revenues!
I want to recommend a box, put it in, have a happy customer and never touch it again but it needs to be bullet proof to do that.
Right, and the questions that you are asking are not about if it is bulletproof or not, but how you can work around it not being bulletproof. That's why I feel that you are overthinking it. If it is bulletproof and their support works, you don't care if they are on Dell or a whitebox or Acer, you don't care about third party suppliers and you don't need spares.
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Imagine having this same conversation about an EMC VMAX or an HPE 3PAR... it would feel silly. And in those cases you know that they are on proprietary everything and that you cannot get parts at the local supplier. Yet you assume that they are bulletproof (and they are, literally in the case of the 3PAR... they've actually put an artillery round through it.) When dealing with enterprise appliances, you care about the quality of the support, the reliability of the product.... but you don't care about mitigating those things should that fail.
And in the case of 3PAR or EMC, if they just disappeared you'd be in horrific shape. But with the Scale, you just take a backup, restore to another box and away you go. The lock in risk is fractional in comparison.
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@scottalanmiller said:
Imagine having this same conversation about an EMC VMAX or an HPE 3PAR... it would feel silly.
I have this conversation about any and every product I look at. Assumptions are stupid.
Take Webroot. The conversation was exactly the same, what ifs, ands or buts. Now it's my favourite endpoint product but there is a level of scepticism the product (and the people promoting it) had to pass.
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If I was building and supporting my own XenServer cluster, then the questions that you are asking are exactly what you would need to ask... where do I get my parts, how quick will it be, have I set it up to be reliable enough until the parts arrive and so forth. That makes total sense.
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@Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:
@scottalanmiller said:
Imagine having this same conversation about an EMC VMAX or an HPE 3PAR... it would feel silly.
I have this conversation about any and every product I look at. Assumptions are stupid.
Take Webroot. The conversation was exactly the same, what ifs, ands or buts. Now it's my favourite endpoint product but there is a level of scepticism the product (and the people promoting it) had to pass.
You are missing my point, I think. My point is that the questions that you are asking are not sceptical ones, but unrelated ones. That's the difference. You aren't asking sceptical questions about if the product is bulletproof, which is what you were actually concerned about, right? You are asking questions based on the assumption that it is not going to be bulletproof and how will you work around a system you are expecting to fail when the entire point of the product is to rely on that system.
No matter what the answers are to your questions, they should not change your faith in the system itself, hence why I am confused by them being asked.
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But the problem is, a Scale system is too expensive to take a leap of faith with, you need to get it right the first time. It's not like I'm buying a toy tablet I can mess around with or a demo or some software.
There's only 1 place in the UK I can even see a Scale system at the moment. It's a risky risky thing to even be thinking about looking into them. They've got maybe 12 installs when I last checked. Versus how many non Scale deployments.
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@Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:
They've got maybe 12 installs when I last checked. Versus how many non Scale deployments.
12? I know more than that many customers personally. They have lots of deployments.
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@scottalanmiller said
12? I know more than that many customers personally. They have lots of deployments.
That's what the rep said at the SW booth...He named one of them which is a big uni.
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@Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:
But the problem is, a Scale system is too expensive to take a leap of faith with, you need to get it right the first time.
That I understand. But... that is less of an issue with a Scale than with any other enterprise appliance, right? The VMAX and 3PAR come to mind, neither can you get a single node for the starter price of a Scale.
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@scottalanmiller said
That I understand. But... that is less of an issue with a Scale than with any other enterprise appliance, right? The VMAX and 3PAR come to mind, neither can you get a single node for the starter price of a Scale.
But are we comparing Apples to Apples here?
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@Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:
@scottalanmiller said
12? I know more than that many customers personally. They have lots of deployments.
That's what the rep said at the SW booth...He named one of them which is a big uni.
Something fishy there, there has to be some confusion.
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UK only, how many deployments of your systems.
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@Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:
@scottalanmiller said
That I understand. But... that is less of an issue with a Scale than with any other enterprise appliance, right? The VMAX and 3PAR come to mind, neither can you get a single node for the starter price of a Scale.
But are we comparing Apples to Apples here?
No, the Scale is a full cluster and total stack at that price, not only one node and one little piece of the big picture. So the Scale is dramatically more accessible and more complete.
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@scottalanmiller said
No, the Scale is a full cluster and total stack at that price, not only one node and one little piece of the big picture. So the Scale is dramatically more accessible and more complete.
But Won't VMAX and 3PAIR say otherwise?
Ubiquiti is 1/4th of the price of Cisco kit but I know and understand why.
Why is Scale much much cheaper?