CloudSphere Other Advice

Vibhor Gupta - PeerSpot reviewer
Migration Customer Solution Manager at a tech services company with 10,001+ employees

I’m a customer and end-user.

We are a partner of this product as well.

I’d rate the solution nine out of ten. In terms of discovery, it is good. However, in terms of other transformations, things like assessment TCO or migration planning, et cetera, are not there.

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Muhammad Imran Ali Jan - PeerSpot reviewer
Senior Executive IT Infrastructure at Wateen Telecom (pvt.)

We have a FortiGate license. The product is very good. The technical support is also very good. If the solution provides a single console to manage everything, it would be more convenient and powerful for system administration. Overall, I rate the tool an eight and a half out of ten.

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Syed Hassan Ahmed - PeerSpot reviewer
Lead MSP and Senior DevOps Engineer at Connection

CloudSphere is a good solution that works well. It can integrate with multiple clouds and manage all our customers. They still have a long way to go, but I think it makes things easier. It's essential to go through their documentation, otherwise it's quite tricky setting up the integration with the cloud. Once that's done, everything is very clear.

CloudSphere serves its purpose of managing multiple customers for multiple clouds for the MSP program. But there are issues with their upgrades and their support team is a little slow to get a handoff. Added to that is the slowing down of the software over time which requires some back-end work. Taking all that into account, I rate this solution seven out of 10.  

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Buyer's Guide
CloudSphere
March 2024
Learn what your peers think about CloudSphere. Get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions. Updated: March 2024.
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Syed Salman Jawaid Najmi - PeerSpot reviewer
Implementation Engineer - DevOps-MSP at ARPATech (Pvt) Ltd

I'm currently using CloudSphere.

My advice to anyone who wants to use CloudSphere is that it's a very good tool for managing multi-cloud environments such as AWS, GCP, or Azure. You can have complete visibility and control over multiple resources using a single-pane solution such as CloudSphere.

My rating for the solution is seven out of ten.

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MW
Infrastructure Technologist at a tech consulting company with 1-10 employees

My advice to someone considering this solution is to take a pragmatic approach, there are set pieces in a hybrid cloud deployment and you have to do a proof of concept with. You have to go in and do an audit. You've got to create a statement of work. You've got to identify, who are the administrators or who's impacted by any downtime once you try to introduce this. You've got to be able to sandbox it. Duplicate the environment in a lab and then sandbox the improvements that you want to integrate and then you got to roll out a pilot and try it.

My biggest pet peeve about doing anything with clouds is that once you sign up for something on the cloud, you don't have any control over what they do with that information. Because of the convenience, nobody thinks about the consequence of putting that stuff out there and what they're going to do with it. Unless you're super technical, you have no concept of what's being done. All you know is that you are getting what you want and you really don't want to burden yourself with figuring out on what's being done.

If you knew what's being done, you wouldn't do it. 

What people don't know, is that IPV6 is the back door. This is where the security issue comes in. IPV6 is the back door for Microsoft all of the network operating. You have to go in and turn it off manually. 

You have to understand those things too. It's second nature for people who work on the environment, but we have to be aware of that because when you're troubleshooting in a hybrid environment, you have to rely on whether it's the existing documentation; you have to rely on your working knowledge about how things connect and what have you, and then you have to try and figure out what's been done. You also have to identify what's on and what's not on; and who's talking and where.

So the hybrid cloud adds a layer of complexity as opposed to having two separate environments to log into; the on-premise environment in the cloud environment.

If you're separate, it makes it a lot easier. But when you're integrated, you're bringing in a whole can of worms at that point.

The next feature I would like to have full disclosure of what's being done with the data.

I would rate it a ten out of ten. But it's a catch 22. It requires a thorough understanding of what the limitations are and what the consequences of utilizing the system itself or trying to accept those limitations.

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Buyer's Guide
CloudSphere
March 2024
Learn what your peers think about CloudSphere. Get advice and tips from experienced pros sharing their opinions. Updated: March 2024.
765,234 professionals have used our research since 2012.