PBA marketing stuff on Amahi.org is very misleading
Posted: Thu Sep 03, 2009 12:54 pm
Calling PBA an "appliance" is a bit of a stretch.
I mean it doesn't support any kind of automated backup. so it's useless in any deployment that invloves more than one or two machines. I mean - "boot to PXE"? To run a backup? I can see doing that for a bare metal restore, but come on.
The Amahi.org pages call it practically a replacement for True Image or Ghost.
It's nothing of the sort. True Image can image a mounted, logged-in filesystem. Automated and unattended. It can do differential and incremental backups, PBA can't.
PBA was one of the big reasons I installed Amahi to test it out and needless to say I'm disappointed in the much overhyped marketing. PBA code hasn't even been touched in years by the developer. He suggested I try Clonezilla, which also isn't anywhere close to what's needed at the desktop level - regular automated backups. A machine that has to be PXE booted or needs other manual intervention in order to be backed up is a machine that won't get backed up. It's just that simple.
So far Amahi looks like it will do a very good job at it's core functionality of being a good file-server.
But these apps they're choosing to advertise with it. Who even recommends this stuff? PBA is a joke compared to inexpensive off the shelf backup software.
I wish Amahi would refrain from offering *any* apps unless they were of very high quality. Some of the apps I think are very good. But PBA is pointless in my opinion - and badly marketed. I don't think anyone at Amahi has ever even used it. If they had I'd think the marketing copy would be a lot less breathless & over-hyped.
Also - a pet peeve of mine is documentation. For instance It's impossible for me to get any clients to PXE boot to the Amahi box. Is the PXE server running? I don't know - where is all the setup stuff documented?
When you guys choose apps to include part of the "high quality" criteria needs to be "well written end user documentation".
Amahi is great. But poorly thought out barely working applications with nonexistent documentation like PBA give it a big black eye in my opinion.
I mean it doesn't support any kind of automated backup. so it's useless in any deployment that invloves more than one or two machines. I mean - "boot to PXE"? To run a backup? I can see doing that for a bare metal restore, but come on.
The Amahi.org pages call it practically a replacement for True Image or Ghost.
It's nothing of the sort. True Image can image a mounted, logged-in filesystem. Automated and unattended. It can do differential and incremental backups, PBA can't.
PBA was one of the big reasons I installed Amahi to test it out and needless to say I'm disappointed in the much overhyped marketing. PBA code hasn't even been touched in years by the developer. He suggested I try Clonezilla, which also isn't anywhere close to what's needed at the desktop level - regular automated backups. A machine that has to be PXE booted or needs other manual intervention in order to be backed up is a machine that won't get backed up. It's just that simple.
So far Amahi looks like it will do a very good job at it's core functionality of being a good file-server.
But these apps they're choosing to advertise with it. Who even recommends this stuff? PBA is a joke compared to inexpensive off the shelf backup software.
I wish Amahi would refrain from offering *any* apps unless they were of very high quality. Some of the apps I think are very good. But PBA is pointless in my opinion - and badly marketed. I don't think anyone at Amahi has ever even used it. If they had I'd think the marketing copy would be a lot less breathless & over-hyped.
Also - a pet peeve of mine is documentation. For instance It's impossible for me to get any clients to PXE boot to the Amahi box. Is the PXE server running? I don't know - where is all the setup stuff documented?
When you guys choose apps to include part of the "high quality" criteria needs to be "well written end user documentation".
Amahi is great. But poorly thought out barely working applications with nonexistent documentation like PBA give it a big black eye in my opinion.