How much for Exchange for 500-800 users?
August 22, 2008 2:29 PM
Subscribe
MS Exchange railroad: How much does it really cost for an in-house Microsoft Exchange system?
The linux/imap/smtp email system at our company sucks (500-800 users) and one of our systems admins wants to deploy Microsoft Exchange (2003 probably) to solve this.
The problem is, the costs and complexity of the proposed Exchange system are spiraling out of control. It went from one physical server hosting Exchange to now 5 or 6 physical servers, each running various components, and talk of server CALs and client CALs. Exchange 2007 will be even more expensive apparently, if/when we upgrade to that.
We're now talking $100k of hardware, and $200-300k of cash thrown at Microsoft, just to get email for several hundred people. (the previous system running on linux was 'cheap', as-in no software license fees, and just a couple servers)
Looking at Microsoft's site, I can't make heads or tails of how this system -really- should be built out (server-wise), and what the actual license costs will be. Scanning the web, I can't find any 'I built Exchange this way for this many people and it cost this much' type of info.
Unfortunately the company brass has already tanked the idea of Google Apps or hosted Exchange, due to security concerns, so I'm actually just looking to find out how much $$ and how complex this Exchange system will be.
I know admin in question is a serious Microsoft zealot, and will just keep on piling on the hardware/software expenses, in order to build a small empire of systems under her control. Plus $500k for email seems pretty extravagant to me personally, and the proposed system is -incredibly- complex. If this admin leaves after setting this all up, we're screwed.
Anyone have any ideas on or pointers on this?
posted by jimjam to computers & internet (12 comments total)
3 users marked this as a favorite
Exchange's biggest advantage is the "office" part; tasks, appointments, etc that are shared among users. Unless this is something you really need, I'd look at revamping your current mail server system. What sucks about it? Chances are, you could build on that a little more to bring it up to what will work for you MUCH cheaper and maybe easier than dumping it and going to Exchange.
posted by chrisfromthelc at 2:38 PM on August 22, 2008