Jasson.Pass
New Member
This would be a good time for some new products to come out and take SolusVM's place.
There's already Virtualizor, HostGuard, VirtKick is a work in progress, and probably a few others I'm failing to mention.This would be a good time for some new products to come out and take SolusVM's place.
Nor would I want to buy anything from you (or anyone) that you're playing the middleman on.Nor would I WANT to sell something I am playing middle-man on
http://cdn.onapp.com/files/brochures/onapp-federation-brochure.pdfYou don’t have to manage multiple clouds, multiple partners, multiple bills and support teams to go global with the OnApp Federation. It’s all managed through your OnApp control panel. The OnApp Federation launched with capacity from providers in more than 170 locations, in 113 cities, across 43 countries, and is growing in scale all the time.
From the wording above, it looks like users will be able to sell from the federation, I don't see OnApp wanting the cesspool of LE providers mucking up their golden cow. They could always do heavy verification of providers to make sure they hold water and aren't a laughing stalk but then they're pitting their own product lines against each other.Congrats @NullMind, nice move. Though I have also a question will SolusVM clients be able to sell on the Federation or only use it for CDN?
From the wording above, it looks like users will be able to sell from the federation, I don't see OnApp wanting the cesspool of LE providers mucking up their golden cow. They could always do heavy verification of providers to make sure they hold water and aren't a laughing stalk but then they're pitting their own product lines against each other.
Francisco
Yep.I see that it could turn into how most of us treat domain name registrations. Why would I order a domain from you, or any other of my providers when I can get it from an actual registar or one of their glorified resellers like what NameCheap is to eNom? That is how people will begin to view the whole Federation thing. Why buy it from xyz123redcatextremehost when I can get the same product, minus the middle man for a better(?) price by going closer to the source?
Ouch... burn. I don't think he's a member here anyhow though.see people charge $1 + paypal fees ontop of base cost and claim that they've paid for a Lamborghini Aventador off it.
These are recent actual quotes (borrowed from LET) from a SolusVM using middleman provider (who shall go nameless) when something went wrong which illustrate why I have always avoided middlemen when I'm buying something mission critical like a dedicated server (or a "redundant cloud"):the middle man
Scrapping the whole code base and rewriting it will likely improve it greatly. From what I can remember, it's pieced together from the original product without much consideration for how well it works with large-scale operations now.At the moment the main goal is to look at what can be improved and what else can be done to make it a better product, TBH the product is priced incredibly well
To add to this, their API for WHMCS was a joke. Terminations never worked (VM's would be suspended before termination, but their API wasn't smart to know that onapp requires the VM to be unsuspended first, then terminate).Don't worry. Noone is that capable to make SolusVM worse
In SolusVM world, everything is designed by the principle that every single command executed should work perfectly, without any errors. No checks, what so ever. And that's why you end up with issues like:
- Containers created without IPs
- Zombie containers hanging out randomly on the nodes
- Suspended containers that are still running
- Containers supposedly powered on but offline
- And pretty much everything that can fail, fails without letting you know.
All of which have the same basic design flaws.There's already Virtualizor, HostGuard, VirtKick is a work in progress, and probably a few others I'm failing to mention.
The problem is that short of SolusVM tripling the price or something (or forcing a minimum volume per month, OnApp style), they aren't going to swap.It would be nice if an up-and-coming project like this could get enough financial support to have their code professionally audited prior to its release. Seems like it would be good advertising long-term. Audited and secured right from the start? Sounds good to me. I mean, I'd be impressed by that. On the other hand, I'm truthfully not sure how much a good audit should cost. It would be a shame for it to go the way of HyperVM, and certainly not with the same outcome.
Thanks, Im the CVO and one of the co-foundersCongratulations on the move @NullMind , just out of interest, what is your role on onapp?
The longterm roadmap is still to be mapped, but for now, it's improve on whats there and open the federation accessAlright well I guess making this a bit more of a discussion now
What can we expect to see in the near future for SolusVM? What's the long-term goal for SolusVM (in addition to white-label cloud?)?
The backing of a well established software developer, you can rest assure your software provider is going to be there tomorrow, plus we want to make the product more solid.As a provider, what benefits should I see that comes out of this?
Actually, one was just performed not long ago, and our own guys of course are going trough it now in detail.Can we request an audit on the code of SolusVM (would that be a great investment)?
As said before, the long term roadmap is still to be defined, but watch this spaceIn addition to the previous questions asked (by me and others), what's the biggest 3 changes we'll see?
Is there anything else you'd like us to know about this acquisition and the future of SolusVM and OnApp?
We do have plans to make the UI/UX better, thats one of the things we are passionate about here at OnApp, good UI/UXJust as a note while you're here, I've had to sometimes go through weird means to get certain actions done previously (as a client and as a provider). Is there any way to get a completely new and refreshing UI for the Admin and the Client side? (either or even?)
No, we don't see it that way, these will remain two separate software packages with their own target audiences.Edit:
Here's another question. Will (sometime in the future) OnApp's cloud platform and SolusVM actually merge and become one piece of software? (not in like a way to resell cloud service on OnApp's systems but actual like one thing setup together?)