A lot of your guys are just plain ridiculous!
How some of you have the tenacity to debate the idea of Observium wanting to charge a $165/Year ($13.75/Month) is …. Complete loss of words.
Have you ever looked around to see what everyone else is charging for their monitoring systems? It ranges anywhere from $2/Month per device to systems like Nimsoft that can cost is excess of $50/Month per device. It is nowhere near uncommon for companies to shell out a quarter million dollars to purchase a monitoring system and you guys are clammering over $165 bucks, get real.
For you who are working for non-profits & education system you could skip lunch once a month and purchase Obvserium to make your job easier. I realize that not everyone thinks that spending money on their job is logical, but in today’s world when budgets are tight you have to decide which is more important, no job at all or spending a few bucks to make your job easier (even impress your boss once in a while).
Once the new alerting system is finished up Observium will be on par with many other monitoring systems out there and all for $0.165 per device per year…it’s a steal.
/end rant
From: observium [mailto:observium-bounces@observium.org] On Behalf Of Tim Schuh
Sent: Tuesday, October 8, 2013 10:38 AM
To: Observium Network Observation System
Subject: Re: [Observium] Observium Community / Professional
Spin it this way. They spend $160 per year to get software that saves you from having to develop it from scratch.
Estimated time to develop: <insert ludicrous amount of time here> realistically six to twelve months of relatively uninterrupted.
ROI == ((<ludicrous time> - <deployment time>) * <your hourly wage>) - $160 / $160
Any administrator should be able to understand the value in that.
From: Eric Stewart <eric@usf.edu>
Reply-To: Observium Network Observation System <observium@observium.org>
Date: Monday, October 7, 2013 3:29 PM
To: Observium Network Observation System <observium@observium.org>
Subject: Re: [Observium] Observium Community / Professional
Hey, if it were coming out of my pocket, I'd be all over the idea of "Well, let me pay for it for a year and see if some of what we need gets into the code, and maybe even contribute a bit to the code." Indeed, the idea of putting my own out of pocket money in for the first year hasn't quite been rejected. Also toying with the idea of using the free version for as much as we can get out of it, tacking on the one or two things that are a must have for our environment, and trying to get the code added through the methods suggested by Tom.
The split editions move is just crappy timing for me. Not blaming anyone for that, not really even complaining, that's just what it is. And I have no problem with the need to fund development, nor the method used to do so. Just doesn't look like it's going to work for my situation because the product just isn't where we would need it to be to buy in at this time.
I do dearly hope it gets there, though.
On Monday, October 07, 2013 3:36:36 PM, Colin Anderson wrote:
Hey guys,
Following this thread… I have a hard time believing someone can’t get
away with putting $160 into an expense for their IT department. Any
budget I’ve ever seen accounts for some additional day to day expenses
within a certain limit. I mean what do you do if a hard drive fails
or you need more RAM for a server – go through an approval process
with the board? I don’t think it’s the school that’s being cheap…
-Colin
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Eric Stewart - Network Administrator - eric@usf.edu
University of South Florida, Information Technology