$1500 is the cost of the box, the server os, the exchange server, the AD, and set up. The client licenses (aka outlook) run about $40 per user. Since set up can be done off the AD controller (including client program installation) there is almost no cost associated with it. I have not found a way to manage a similar mail application for less in a medium size environment. Remember you have to pay every tech their hourly wage and/or loose the productivity of the worker if they are setting up their own clients so it is far from free. The total cost of ownership for things like SAMBA are very low, but for products like Asterisk they can be quite high. In addition products like qmail are not collaboration suites. I can not search the calendars of 20 people and 3 resources to find compactable meeting times and assign group tasks to sub groups of people to be worked on, tracked and returned by said meeting then we are not talking about a comparable product. Products like FirstClass have functions like this, but are typically more expensive to implement then Exchange (though I am also told it is nicer, never used it my self though) As for the list of features, the mail portion can be replaced by just about anything. Exchange mail is nothing special when it comes to mail, we are talking about a collaboration suite and PIM. Meldware Communication Suite looks like it may be close, if it added more group functions, tasks, and document management associated with cross linked calendar and task items it would be very close. As for the flame comment... I felt famed by Craig, and I have not had the chance to get in a good argument as of late so I will back off the adamant position ;) Especially since the last three companies I consulted for asked about exchange and I persuaded them it was not the rite solution for them. Don't get me wrong, I would have been happy to take their money and set it up, but their were better cost/benefit solutions for them. On that note has any one actually worked with Zimbra? I hear their "professional" edition is very nice but their open source version is still lacking.. Thoughts? -----Original Message----- From: plug-discuss-bounces@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us [mailto:plug-discuss-bounces@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us] On Behalf Of Bob Elzer Sent: Friday, February 20, 2009 3:15 PM To: 'Main PLUG discussion list' Subject: RE: OT:Exchange good? - And the flame wars begin (Was:Re:newhotness?) Well here is the list of mail server software for people to check out. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_mail_servers And Bryan, I'm not trying to flame you, but I think your argument, points out exactly why Exchange is not the way to go. I understand you're happy with it, and it works for you, I'm not trying to make you change it. But $1500 ?, Is that just the cost of exchange ? What about the Box, and all the other programs you are citing to help maintain it, and the licenses for each of those programs based on 70 users. That's $2800 for outlook alone. You can design mail systems to accomplish all these tasks via linux or MS, and they will both work, but when it comes down to it, MS will always be a proprietary system and will cost more to implement. On the Linux side you can go all free, or mix and match, sure you may have to configure more programs. But once you have a solution working on both sides, it is always going to cost more to add a user on the MS side than on the linux side. Like I said before, we don't have a performance benchmark, to even compare. Why don't we come up with a list, of what features are required for a stand alone mail server, and compare MS vs Linux solutions, and then compare the prices of those components. Maybe for a 20 user, 100 user, 500 user system. -----Original Message----- From: plug-discuss-bounces@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us [mailto:plug-discuss-bounces@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us] On Behalf Of Bryan O'Neal Sent: Friday, February 20, 2009 2:28 PM To: 'Main PLUG discussion list' Subject: RE: OT:Exchange good? - And the flame wars begin (Was:Re: newhotness?) Craig, I think you are missing the point. So, not to call you out on the carpet here but have you ever managed a large enterprise? If so could you please explain your ideal concept of how you manage to keep productivity high and cost low without use of any non-free or non-open products? Take Asterisk for example. I love it but the total cost of ownership is outrageously high in comparison to systems like Avaya and ShoreTel. And that is without the incredible ease of integration of systems like ShoreTel have with outlook. You bag on Exchange but offer no comparative substitute. You complain about the fact it uses AD and how much it costs even though it is included free in several flavors of Exchange distribution. You complain about mailbox implementation but seem to think it is the only DB your company would be running. How do you back up your Oracle, MySQL, DB2, or Postges systems? And again with the scanning, it provides it's own free scanning system, however it is idiotic to be dinging the bulk of your spam scanning on the mail server. By the time it reaches your server the cost of resources expended to handle it far outweigh the cost of third party scanning. And the fact that Third party AV scans can be integrated easily is not a bad thing, saying so is like saying postfix sucks because you can use spamassisen and calmav. In fact I can use clamAV but it does not provide the same level of service for the same maintenance cost of better products like Avast. That said you say the only client is outlook, so my question is what server/client system do you have that provides anywhere near as much to the party as exchange/outlook? If you have one I would really, really, love to try it out! But I have not found one. Certainly Cyrus is not it. And for cost I can put an exchange system in for a 70 person office with all the clients and servers licensed from scratch with AD and everything, including the server and my time to set it up for less then $1500. In addition each users outlook costs only $40 and that also includes all the other MS bundled stuff we have not talked about (Share point, etc.). And while there are far better solutions for nearly all of it (especially MS SQL Server) Tell me now. Can you purchase a server, provide a integrated collaborative PIM suite in a single interface providing mail, contacts, basic CRM, takes, notes, and journal com tracking for the same price? If so I really would like to see it because I have bee hunting for this for almost 10 years! I hold fast that Exchange is one of very, very few MS products that has a very high ROI. And, have you every had to integrate a BES with something other then Exchange? Or are you some one who has never managed more then a handful of mobile devices. Now if you're a single person or a company of 5 it is stupid to implement exchange. Use Google. If you're a fleet of sales people who never talk to each other and have an independent sales management application, then again, Exchange is not your option, but for most small campus based businesses that employ a group of average people who need to communicate easily with their teams exchange is your answer. In the real world your business needs and the bottom line dictate the solution, not your personal feelings. And time and time again, for medium business after medium business, Exchange has provided. If you really want we can conger up an average small company prototype and each deliver a robust communications plan. But I think your average CFP will pick the exchange plan every time. And yes one of my three home computers is MS, and yes I run outlook on it (Evolution and thunderbird on the other two) But Outlook is my primary PIM. I find on lists like this I have the fringe voice of pay/proprietary software, just like in the business world I am the fringe voice of free and open source. So, I get flamed from both sides. -----Original Message----- From: plug-discuss-bounces@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us [mailto:plug-discuss-bounces@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us] On Behalf Of Craig White Sent: Friday, February 20, 2009 10:24 AM To: Main PLUG discussion list Subject: RE: OT:Exchange good? (Was:Re: new hotness?) On Fri, 2009-02-20 at 09:45 -0700, Bryan O'Neal wrote: > I disagree... Mostly. > > - Tough to backup > Like any database it needs to be shut down for standard file backups > to work properly. This can be done via a simple script and is not a > real issue. > However the use of back up programs like BackupExec make it a breeze > to back up and restore. However I will agree that if you never had to > deal with it before and you don't have much space and you don't have > something like Backup Exec it can be daunting to figure out how to get > regular backups working. That said I also like to run all the clients > so they keep a copy of all activity locally. Not only does this speed > up the clients but it also ensures that if the server suddenly went > belly up and the last backup I had was 10 or 12 hours old (if I was > using a file backup system) I could restore everything up to the > minuet for people who had their clients running. If I thought it was > worth the time I would have liked to virtualizes the exchange server > and take regular snap shots of it throughout the day. However other > projects provided a greater return for the time invested so I never > got around to it. ---- this is absurd - once you have used cyrus-imapd and all of the e-mails are separate files you realize how antiquated and stupid the concept of an Exchange mail store is. Oh, you can buy programs with Exchange 'agents' to allow you to back up live or you can use some routine to shut down Exchange to allow a backup but it's clearly a hostile environment, much like backing up any database. ---- > > - Costly to integrate spyware, anti-virus and other content scanning > I never had any issues and must totally disagree. I have always used > the scanning built into exchange. This has been quite a nice feature > since Exchange 2003 SP2 which is quite good at controlling spam, > viruses, and generally enforcing corporate policies. However, for > less then $500 a year you can get a third party to spam scan all of > your email before it ever hits your server. If nothing else this pays > for it's self in saved bandwidth. > If you are a medium size company initial spam scanning should be done > by a third party, after that Exchange can be tweaked quite easily to > help enforce corporate policies. In addition integration with > products like Avast make it easy to offer AV/Threat scanning. After > that exchange is easy to set up for limiting the kinds of files that > can be sent or received, how big a email can be, and even who emails > can be sent or received from. And while I never did it, I am fairly certain you can do key word scanning as well. > Most of this this can be customized on a per user basses. ---- I think you just made my point...buying specialized software add-ons to perform scanning - and of course, the 'Exchange Server' options. ---- > - Specialized client software (Outlook) You can chose what ever client > you want, but some features may not be limited or not available. A > fairly good webmail client is provided. You can use POP and IMAP for > any client with regards to your email. With some server side add-ons > colanders can be made available as well and global contacts can be > driven via ldap. While it is true if you want to use the advanced > features you have to use outlook, but again, I have not found any > other client/sere pair that provides these features, so it is not > surprising that other clients can not use them when connecting to the server. ---- good webmail is easily implemented as are LDAP client applications. OWA is adequate. ---- > - Requires AD > Yes. However this is like saying that it requires an MS server to run > so I really don't see your point. I can integrate my Linux servers > and clients seamlessly into AD using krb and some people indicate the > opposite is also true. It is an enterprise mail system designed > around collaboration. If you don't have an enterprise to collaborate > with you probably are not looking at outlook. If you believe it ads > additional expense look at the small business edition. The price for > a fully integrated MS environment is very cheep these days. ---- My point seemed to be rather obvious. You're in for the penny, you're in for the pound. The issue isn't about whether Linux or Macintosh can integrate into an AD environment...of course they can. The issue was about buying in and having AD dictate everything from user accounts to machine access and all resource management. To use Exchange, you have no choice other than to go the whole hog...there was no other options after Exchange 5.5 The simple truth is that Microsoft didn't create the Enterprise environment nor do they possess the only logical implementation. They have the marketing muscle and the foresight to create artificial dependencies to use software to dictate implementation. Start tossing in curveballs such as IP Telephony integration and it becomes a major clusterf**k. The ultimate issue is that the only decent client for Exchange is Outlook and thus the only decent OS to use is Windows and thus the vendor lock-in is full circle. Clearly as businesses tighten their belts, the costs of license 6 or just generally the various licenses necessary to be purchased for client access, whether to files or to Exchange Server or to MS-SQL server get to be absurd. As few businesses have embraced the move to Vista, Linux options for the desktop continue to improve and Exchange Server will see its value declining. Craig --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss