CheapVehicleWrap
New Member
And I am a fan of avoiding cloud networks.
em, er....someone needs a new username
And I am a fan of avoiding cloud networks.
I'm perfectly aware of what cloud computing is, so no confusion on my part. What I am asking, is why would I put mission critical data that is vital to our businesses interest, in the hands of someone else? What do I gain by doing that is my question.
In my opinion, the risk/reward just isn't there. What is the reward? To be able to see various files from anywhere in the world from various devices? I can already do that now, without having to be "in the cloud" with my storage of said data.
So what else is the reward? Having my data backed up off site. FTP has allowed that for years. No big deal there either.
So what's next? My question is really what can I do with the cloud that I can't already do, and the answer keeps coming up "Nothing".
Now, if you want to debate whether someone made some really good cloud software that fits our business needs like a glove, that's different. Just because someone designed good POS software for the cloud and skipped designing it for stand alone machines, doesn't mean it makes it the right thing to do. I have yet to hear what doing business in the cloud can do that can't already be done. Maybe there are things. I'm open to learn. Teach me
To cloud or not to cloud, we each have to find our comfort level.
You can have another thread to promote v-o-x, you have enough members here in this discussion that if you plan to have a group webinar, you can contact us.
As in Sar Bossier case, we have systems that worked OK for us but like to explore if better one existed. You can stick to your way of selling as it is your business.
em, er....someone needs a new username
Except that it was gibberish. There are few on this board who don't benefit from cloud? Probably half the board uses gmail, which is cloud SaaS. In any case this conversation has passed it's usefulness quite a while ago ;P.
Jesse, I still don't get it. We're not employing 50 people making signs here. We don't have a retail store making decals at Disneyland. You're talking to the "IT" person now. I don't know what you're talking about with all these "IT" costs. We've hired an IT person......zero times in the last 5 years. So we have no "IT" costs to recover.
Backing up takes minutes, not hours.
I'm still waiting for anyone to tell me what I can do with cloud based software that I can't already do.
We don't have racks of servers chugging out data all day. I suspect neither do 98% of the people reading this forum.
I'm all for it if it'll do something that helps do something I can't already do.
One thing I do not like about many of these cloud based services is that they seem to all be tied into sign companies. So they are all asking me to put all my customer and pricing information onto a server that another sign company administers. Are you telling me it's not possible for someone to do a sql query and pull some of the most valuable marketing data every from 500 other sign companies? You'd have regional, national, and international information. You'd know more about the sign business than just about anyone on the planet, as far as what's working and where it's working.
I've not seen any legal disclosures on the data you put on the cloud, but if they use the same one google does, then they have the right to analyze all data you're putting on their servers.
I'd type more, but the black helicopters are circling the building and I need to slip out the back......
It sounds like you are doing offsite storage anyway wich is what I was advocating. the only problem is that it might be too close to the shop. The biggest problem with restarting a shop after a disaster is not replacing the equipment, Insurance companies will take care of that in short order. What insurance companies can not do is buy you a brand new set of files.