What is our primary use case?
My use cases for N-able N-central always start with hardware monitoring, but since Enable expanded its portfolio, it's always getting more and more options and use cases. Sometimes we start with the hardware monitoring, but then we include patching of Windows servers and Windows devices. For now, we are still using their antivirus, although we are changing to Windows Defender, but that's a strategic decision in the company. We still have the central one as our second option, which is still through Enable.
The dashboarding at the moment is not yet through N-able N-central, but it would be that case in the near future.
What is most valuable?
The most helpful features of N-able N-central include providing a single pane of glass for many insights in an environment regarding their patching, their assets, their devices in general, and the active issues that they show. The fact that I can do 90% of my job through this platform is significant as I do a lot of monitoring for customers. I don't need VPN almost, I can send my scripts for certain things or check something directly through a device, which means I don't have to remote connect in many occasions.
I can just go to command prompt, start session and I'm connected to command prompt from the server, just send something, or I can do a script or an automation policy just through task execution. I can get information about the running services, processes, the registry. On the file system, I can retrieve files, I can send files directly from this single pane of glass, which is my office.
N-able N-central provides me with the Automation Manager that allows us to use their agents and probes to send scripts and other checks regarding the patch management.
What needs improvement?
There are areas in N-able N-central that could be improved. We always started it from the basic purpose of monitoring hardware, where vendors such as HP and Dell try to sell their own services which monitor and provide a dashboard, which is their logic. They want to make their own recurring revenue on that. We notice that SNMP has had a good run and still sometimes is used, but it's becoming an issue to maintain the same capabilities because HP makes it unreliable or even removes certain features that we used to be able to validate redundant array of independent disks.
Our service that has been running for 15-20 years suddenly is not working anymore because HP decided in generation 10 plus and above, or generation 10 hardware in servers, storage controllers particularly, they just didn't put the SNMP OIDs anymore. We are now following that market change or business change in hardware monitoring and the future is Redfish, REST API, IPMI type of monitoring with the REST API and Redfish being most common.
We have to do the effort ourselves because Enable is not really strategically going there because I assume there's not much money to make to improve that or to convince customers to start with their product. That issue could be better if they would be more prepared for that change and give us customers more tools, preconfigured, pre-available custom services for Redfish, REST API, where we just have to put a few items username, password and address and some dots and commas, but that we don't have to reinvent the wheel, which we are doing at the moment.
We are using HP iLO commandlets and REST APIs for Aruba. Dell is making it very hard to monitor their hardware. If it has an iDRAC, I can manage it and monitor it, but if it's something that's less common or due to the portfolio, they have done a good job at not exposing information about health. We would just want to have a red or a green dot that indicates if this device is healthy or not healthy.
Since nobody's investing in SNMP because it's a liability in security, they should invest in making a REST API and preferably also do the work on making it easy to pull or push information. That's something that the industry in general and Enable in particular could do a significant job to help us monitor.
For how long have I used the solution?
I've been working with N-able N-central for more than 10 years.
What do I think about the scalability of the solution?
For multi-tenant management, N-able N-central provides me the capability to serve a few hundred customers effectively that I manage.
How are customer service and support?
Regarding the support of Enable, I am rather happy because if something remains an issue, we do get their third-line support to check on it and they do give back some useful feedback most of the times. Sometimes it's just that you need to update the product because it has a certain issue. That's not an easy thing because since we have many customers, we cannot just do it weekly or monthly. It's something that we do maybe every six months to be honest, to keep it useful and manageable. In general, the service is okay, and I would say we are a seven out of 10 satisfied.
How would you rate customer service and support?
How was the initial setup?
The initial setup of N-able N-central is not something I did myself in production. I got the box already running, but I have done a lot of updates on customers' own servers. We have a customer which has their own server, which sort of is my issue because they always are behind with the updates, so I do the updates. The initial setup is easier these days than in the past.
It takes approximately a few days for the setup. If you take it for a few days, preparing and then setting it up and getting the last quirks out of it, that would be a fair amount of time. One day to do the actual setup and do it all correctly would be an assumption in my opinion because there's always something that you forget, but tweaking it and getting it to optimum performance might take another day.
What other advice do I have?
I consider N-able N-central to be a cost-effective tool with fair pricing in the market. Fair if you're big enough. If you start, it's not that cheap, of course, because you don't have that much revenue and the initial cost for a small business would be a steep hill. Once you grow a bit to a medium-sized business type of customer, if your customers are big enough and you get enough licenses, you also have some negotiation space to say, can I get a better price per device? On a scale of 1-10, I rate N-able N-central an 8.
Which deployment model are you using for this solution?
On-premises
If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?
Other