That's a bit crap of them, but I do imagine they've got some serious contenders they're looking to poach. I'd just call Dell. They have a partnership with them and will be offering a VxRail-alike shortly.
Try a different VAR? We aren't that small but we aren't all that large either. Nutanix engaged with me last year before they even knew what size environment I was thinking about.so... looks like I'm too small to get any response from Nutanix. I pushed my VAR about a dozen times and that went exactly nowhere other than to find out that last Friday was a Nutanix "Wellness Day". I was pretty darn clear this was for a potential immediate purchase, but nope... not interested in a measly 3-node cluster sale.
last time I tried pricing it, doing VMs, that came out to be over 4k/month for VMs or ~2.5k/month for dedicated hardware, but the break-even on the cheapest way there still was about 15 months when compared to local hardware. There is some VM sprawl I can probably clean up and maybe some other services I can migrate from VMs to SAAS functions, but I've yet to see any that aren't way more expensive when we are so static and stable and located at just a single location.Have you priced forklifting it to AWS/Azure?
We're in a similar position -- too many VMs for IaaS to be affordable, but also too many esoteric systems to be able to push most of it to SaaS (not that SaaS is a whole lot cheaper in the long run). I'm looking at an ESXi hardware refresh next year, and with the switch to per-core licensing in VMware I'll probably have to make some serious compromises when it comes to how much resource headroom I want to keep available.last time I tried pricing it, doing VMs, that came out to be over 4k/month for VMs or ~2.5k/month for dedicated hardware, but the break-even on the cheapest way there still was about 15 months when compared to local hardware. There is some VM sprawl I can probably clean up and maybe some other services I can migrate from VMs to SAAS functions, but I've yet to see any that aren't way more expensive when we are so static and stable and located at just a single location.
Nutanix has had storages only nodes for years.That was always the downside of HCI for us. Everything had to grow in chunks (I think they have storage only now, maybe?) and you ended up buying a lot of what you didn't need to expand another portion.
Hardware was reasonable, but I didn't get a definitive answer yet on the DR side other than that it likely is a 2-node or 3-node cluster and they had to check if 2-node was even possible.... meanwhile, for 3-years with hardware it looks like the literal smallest option is going to be over $250k. Suddenly my two site 3 server vCenter setup with a 2-node cluster looks like a bargain 
They're almost there on features with the release due out this month. Almost. To be fair, they have a few things that VMware don't have, as well. But obviously I'm not using them right now so it's hard to calculate the value. We haven't had Broadcom's quote yet, but the promise from the sales rep is to beat it by at least redacted amount. The important part to us will be if Dell will let us convert vxrail to nxrail, either by a firmware change or trade in. I can't get the funding for a new hardware stack, we have to get some value out of the vxrail hardware, even if it's just a generous trade in.We looked into them 10 years ago and that was the same story. It was excessively expensive for less features, functionality and flexibility.
I was suitably amazed when some jackass accidentally reset the UPS in the primary datacentre and everything came up at the second site in under 5 minutes (that's a good 250 VMs). But I also understand that 5 minutes is too long for some people. Also just noting that we have a really big warning sign on the UPS now that no-one is allowed to fucking touch it without someone from the Ops team present.Another reason to have a bunch of generic compute and storage, I can put anything on it I want!
There are some esoteric VMWare things like FT that nobody else has and if you use those features you're well and stuck.
You can convert a vxrail to a generic power edge with a BIOS recovery. It's support afterwards that gets tricky.They're almost there on features with the release due out this month. Almost. To be fair, they have a few things that VMware don't have, as well. But obviously I'm not using them right now so it's hard to calculate the value. We haven't had Broadcom's quote yet, but the promise from the sales rep is to beat it by at least redacted amount. The important part to us will be if Dell will let us convert vxrail to nxrail, either by a firmware change or trade in. I can't get the funding for a new hardware stack, we have to get some value out of the vxrail hardware, even if it's just a generous trade in.
Yeah, the Nutanix techies told us it would absolutely run, and absolutely no-one would support it.You can convert a vxrail to a generic power edge with a BIOS recovery. It's support afterwards that gets tricky.
I was suitably amazed when some jackass accidentally reset the UPS in the primary datacentre and everything came up at the second site in under 5 minutes (that's a good 250 VMs). But I also understand that 5 minutes is too long for some people. Also just noting that we have a really big warning sign on the UPS now that no-one is allowed to fucking touch it without someone from the Ops team present.
We use Nutanix for our remote sites that need a handful of VM's locally with redundancy. 3 years ago they said we could do 2 node clusters, but we went with 3 so that everything can stay up while doing cluster upgrades/etc. We ended up adding a bunch of clusters last year due to some downtime procedures changes around the system. Our hosts are pretty small, as the VM's have low requirements, but each 3 node cluster cost us just over 50k USD each last year. That was hardware+software prepaid for 3yr. Single socket 16 core with 256GB of RAM and 4x3.84TB SSD each. We do use per-vm licensing instead of unlimited on those environments though, so I suspect that's a large cost difference.well... got pricing and waiting on clarification. I don't know what the vSAN licensing cost is for Broadcom and I'll accept that maybe my vCenter license isn't exactly feature parity with the Nutanix starter bundle, but with discounts, their per-core license cost to us was literally 669% higher than Broadcom'sHardware was reasonable, but I didn't get a definitive answer yet on the DR side other than that it likely is a 2-node or 3-node cluster and they had to check if 2-node was even possible.... meanwhile, for 3-years with hardware it looks like the literal smallest option is going to be over $250k. Suddenly my two site 3 server vCenter setup with a 2-node cluster looks like a bargain
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I'm seeing a lot of that, you're not alone. For many of my customers, the cost and aggravation of leaving just barely outweighs that of staying ... for now. I predict a lot of the "almost there" solutions will catch up a lot in the next few years, and people in your position will be better positioned to make the change.and... I caved. While the price increase is really frustrating, the incremental costs from going to anything else is way more... and I chickened out on Hyper-V... we had issues with it in the past that I chalked up to attempting to use sub-par shared storage (which we now have excellent options with NetApp), but getting into the nitty gritty there, it just wasn't worth trying to reshape things here... got a 3-year support contract so kicked that can down the road and will address again in 2027.
I'm kinda shocked and kinda not. On one hand, MS and many of the hardware vendors are flogging the crap out of Azure Stack HCI right now, which is fine for customers who want new hardware, but it's not a one size fits all option. On the other, Hyper-V is absolutely still an option, and it's silly that you don't have a VAR willing to have that conversation with you.I couldn't even get people to talk to me about hyper-v. I asked multiple VARs and our MS team, and everyone was like 'omg you should do azure stack!' Ugh.