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Multiple Monitors


A belt and suspenders* ...and then just a belt

Monitors, monitors, who needs another monitor?

There is a monitor for the network, another for Cisco, one for Juniper, and another for the Avaya PBX. MOM watches Windows.

There is a monitor for VMware and kind of one built by hand for XEN. Every monitor requires special training and a shelf of manuals to decipher the error messages.

TDI has a better way. TDI's "monitor of monitors" framework for virtualization delivers a safe, fast and very effective alternative to monitor proliferation.

Use the transition to virtualization as the "inflection point" to decommission proprietary monitors and deliver an "infrastructure window to the world."

TDI provides "outside in" management for a company's entire infrastructure. Linux, Windows, PBX, HVAC, UPS and any other infrastructure can be managed from a single place. TDI's "monitor of monitors."

This can be set up in days, not months. Now, one can get root cause analysis for all infrastructure problems.

Infrastructure remediation is delivered as IEM's identify the problems anywhere in the infrastructure in real time, present the vendor recommended solutions and even capture the "best practices" for the way an organization solved the problem before.

Now one has "belt and suspenders." Is there still a need for suspenders?

Well, no.

Companies can slowly decommission each of the proprietary monitors - Cisco, Avaya, Juniper, Windows, Linux, one at a time and stop paying maintenance. There is never a risk of losing anything in the process.

This results in real time analysis, persistent logging time stamped to a central clock, remediation from a single place - any web browser.

When disaster strikes, companies can manage the entire infrastructure from any web browser, not having to get on a plane or try to get to a flooded data center.

Invest in belts — not monitors.


*Braces for our British friends