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    The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3

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    • Deleted74295D
      Deleted74295 Banned @scottalanmiller
      last edited by

      UK only, how many deployments of your systems.

      @scale

      scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • scottalanmillerS
        scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
        last edited by

        @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.

        Deleted74295D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • Deleted74295D
          Deleted74295 Banned @scottalanmiller
          last edited by

          @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?

          scottalanmillerS 3 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • scottalanmillerS
            scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
            last edited by

            @Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:

            UK only, how many deployments of your systems.

            @scale

            OH, UK only. That would be a smaller number. I know lots of US deployments. The only concern there would be Dell's supply chain though, right? I mean it is the same product, there is nothing UK specific about it. Do you have concern with Dell parts in the UK?

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            • scottalanmillerS
              scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
              last edited by

              @Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:

              Ubiquiti is 1/4th of the price of Cisco kit but I know and understand why.

              Because Cisco sales through marketing and can charge anything they want because value is not part of the equation.

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              • scottalanmillerS
                scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
                last edited by

                @Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:

                But Won't VMAX and 3PAIR say otherwise?

                No, they'd be lying through their teeth to claim that one node was two or that storage was compute.

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                • scottalanmillerS
                  scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
                  last edited by

                  @Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:

                  Why is Scale much much cheaper?

                  Same reason Ubiquiti is... high volume, commodity hardware, open source base, in house technology with low overhead cost, high vertical integration to capture revenue from all points in the platform pricing (compute, storage, platform, support, etc.)

                  The real question should be... why would you assume that it would cost more? It's hard to explain why something is "cheap" when it seems like a reasonable price. What makes you feel that it is unreasonable low requiring explanation?

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                  • Deleted74295D
                    Deleted74295 Banned @scottalanmiller
                    last edited by

                    @scottalanmiller said

                    The real question should be... why would you assume that it would cost more?

                    Because if everyone else is selling Apples at $10 a pack and has done for years and a new shop opens which sells them at $5 a pop.

                    Either the new shop is doing something screwy.
                    Everyone else is ripping you off/charging because they can.

                    9/10, the answer is generally the cheaper guy is doing something screwy but every once in a while you get a nice surprise.

                    scottalanmillerS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • scottalanmillerS
                      scottalanmiller
                      last edited by

                      If you were to price out the Scale hardware yourself, you could figure out where their profit opportunity is. Then figure that they deal in large scale so they get better deals than you will, as well. If all you wanted was the Scale hardware, you could do it much cheaper. Their system is designed to need minimal support which keeps their support costs low by not needing to do so much. Since the software that they use is in house or open source, there is no hard cost associated with that. So if you look at the difference in sales cost to the hardware cost, that's the margin and it is very clearly there. They need it, as there is a lot of in house development and such, but you can see that they have solid margins built in.

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                      • scottalanmillerS
                        scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
                        last edited by

                        @Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:

                        Because if everyone else is selling Apples at $10 a pack and has done for years and a new shop opens which sells them at $5 a pop.

                        But the issue isn't that someone was selling apples and now someone else is selling apples. It's that someone was selling oranges at $10 and now someone has a pear for $5. It's a different thing, there is no reason to assume that it would cost the same.

                        But, this costs more, not less. If you compare three Dell R430 without Scale, that's $5. If you look at the Scale, it's $10. So they aren't selling the same thing for less, they are selling it for more (with more value added, of course.)

                        That's the "apples to apples" pricing difference. What EMC and 3PAR do is unrelated, it's only a talking point because they are similarly appliances, not competing devices.

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                        • scottalanmillerS
                          scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
                          last edited by

                          @Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:

                          Everyone else is ripping you off/charging because they can.

                          9/10, the answer is generally the cheaper guy is doing something screwy but every once in a while you get a nice surprise.

                          Cisco, VMware, IBM, Microsoft... they all charge an arm and a leg because they've taught people that big names are worth any price and they sell through managers, not IT people.

                          All of them have low cost or free competitors that blow their doors off... Ubiquiti, Xen, Dell, CentOS.

                          If you price out a big name that sells on marketing muscle, the price is nearly always double what it should be. So no surprises there.

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                          • Deleted74295D
                            Deleted74295 Banned
                            last edited by

                            https://www.scalecomputing.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/networking-guidelines.pdf

                            Hmm. I think some testing with Ubiquiti gear would be welcome.

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                            • scottalanmillerS
                              scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
                              last edited by

                              @Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:

                              https://www.scalecomputing.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/01/networking-guidelines.pdf

                              Hmm. I think some testing with Ubiquiti gear would be welcome.

                              It would be, but UBNT doesn't have 10GigE switches yet. You "almost always" want to be on 10GigE with a Scale cluster, so the GigE stuff doesn't get the big priority. We would love to be on UBNT for all of our switching but they just don't have what we need. So we have Dell 10GigE switches that feed up into our UBNT.

                              Deleted74295D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                              • Deleted74295D
                                Deleted74295 Banned @scottalanmiller
                                last edited by

                                @scottalanmiller said

                                It would be, but UBNT doesn't have 10GigE switches yet. You "almost always" want to be on 10GigE with a Scale cluster,

                                Assuming you have 2 clusters in 2 locations, how is it over say 50 down, 50 up WAN connections?

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                                • Deleted74295D
                                  Deleted74295 Banned
                                  last edited by

                                  Can the Scale stuff interlink between the units directly over 10Gig and then for user connections to resources they use the standard Gigabit?

                                  scottalanmillerS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • scottalanmillerS
                                    scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
                                    last edited by

                                    @Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:

                                    @scottalanmiller said

                                    It would be, but UBNT doesn't have 10GigE switches yet. You "almost always" want to be on 10GigE with a Scale cluster,

                                    Assuming you have 2 clusters in 2 locations, how is it over say 50 down, 50 up WAN connections?

                                    That's very different. The backplane is where you want 10GigE, because that is your local storage network talking to itself. You have reads and writes that traverse that backplane. It's not the LAN traffic, but the internal cluster traffic.

                                    Going between clusters is very dependent on a lot of different things. I've not tested it but it would be very workload dependent and dependent on how you set up the two locations to work. But it is async, so the speed of the WAN link does not slow down the cluster, but the speed of the backplane does.

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                                    • IRJI
                                      IRJ
                                      last edited by

                                      If there is one thing I've learned in IT, go with reliability over cost everyday of the week. Even thousands of dollars is minimal when you are in the heat of having critical systems go down.

                                      Deleted74295D 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                                      • scottalanmillerS
                                        scottalanmiller @Deleted74295
                                        last edited by

                                        @Breffni-Potter said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:

                                        Can the Scale stuff interlink between the units directly over 10Gig and then for user connections to resources they use the standard Gigabit?

                                        Yes, there are two different networks. A backplane and a LAN / frontplane. They are not directly related in any way. So one could be 10GigE and one could be GigE.

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                                        • Deleted74295D
                                          Deleted74295 Banned @scottalanmiller
                                          last edited by

                                          @scottalanmiller said

                                          Yes, there are two different networks. A backplane and a LAN / frontplane. They are not directly related in any way. So one could be 10GigE and one could be GigE.

                                          Ok but do I need a separate switch for the backplane network or do they have the ports to do it by themselves?

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                                          • Deleted74295D
                                            Deleted74295 Banned @IRJ
                                            last edited by

                                            @IRJ said in The Four Things That You Lose with Scale Computing HC3:

                                            If there is one thing I've learned in IT, go with reliability over cost everyday of the week. Even thousands of dollars is minimal when you are in the heat of having critical systems go down.

                                            But sometimes you pay for the perception of reliability at a higher price.

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