

ThousandEyes and DX NetOps compete in the network monitoring category. ThousandEyes appears to have the upper hand due to its comprehensive monitoring capabilities, particularly for internet layers and cloud providers.
Features: ThousandEyes provides extensive monitoring for internet and WAN layers, offering deep insights into network layers and integration with Cisco products. DX NetOps stands out for its ease of setup, spectrum management, and performance management, focusing on infrastructure data collection and resource allocation.
Room for Improvement: ThousandEyes needs better application and direct network device monitoring, and enhanced integration with dashboards like Grafana. DX NetOps should automate network tasks, improve network configuration management, and benefit from unified modules for efficiency.
Ease of Deployment and Customer Service: Both offer on-premises and hybrid cloud deployment. ThousandEyes is praised for its responsive technical support and straightforward deployment. DX NetOps receives positive feedback but needs better response times and documentation clarity.
Pricing and ROI: ThousandEyes is moderately priced with costs based on agent deployment, showing significant ROI through improved network performance. DX NetOps offers subscription-based pricing and extends discounts, appearing cost-effective with good ROI via monitoring and optimization.
It can save you the cost of the product by reducing expenses and downtimes in 12 to 18 months.
There has been a great ROI from using ThousandEyes, with significant time saved in troubleshooting as I can quickly pinpoint issues rather than spending time isolating them, alongside enhancing customer feedback and experience.
I have seen a return on investment by reducing troubleshooting time and having lesser user mapping error issues, in addition to engineering time saved through better observability and reduced organizational MTTR.
They are fast, responsive, and have technical expertise.
Everything about DX NetOps is perfect, including the interface, technical support, and pricing.
Creating a support case based on priority allows for immediate responses.
We contacted the support team, and they resolved it within a couple of hours.
The customer support for ThousandEyes is very proactive and supportive.
The product is very scalable, to the maximum.
Scalability with ThousandEyes is straightforward as you don't really need to scale; it's designed to monitor multiple applications, accommodating 50 or 100 applications simultaneously.
ThousandEyes's scalability is excellent; it is very scalable and grows with my organization's needs.
I rate the stability of the product as ten on a scale of one to ten, indicating that it is very stable.
From my experience, ThousandEyes has been stable up to 95%; I have not seen any stability issues.
ThousandEyes is not very stable; sometimes you have to reboot the servers to get actual results.
DX NetOps is somewhat convoluted, and some of the programming constructs can be documented or driven through languages such as Python, Perl, and shell scripting, but they have their proprietary language, which may not be very user-friendly.
Different communication methods such as agent-based connections, TCP/IP, or secured connections are necessary—features not currently available in DX NetOps and Spectrum.
I would particularly like it to integrate with the Symantec portfolio and the Carbon Black portfolio.
Incidents should be alerted on and traced early, before they escalate to full outages.
Having a dedicated incident alert system for URL alerts would help manage noise and streamline operations, especially during patch upgrades.
An area where ThousandEyes can be improved is in providing more in-depth packet analysis; we've found instances where ThousandEyes indicates everything is okay, but it's actually not.
The licensing cost of DX NetOps is expensive, not very affordable, and on the top of the price range in the market.
I think the pricing is expensive.
My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing has been that everything was cost-effective.
My experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing is that it comes in cheaper than alternatives.
The product features include automation through AI, allowing out-of-the-box analysis of performance data, building baseline trends, and enabling configuration of dynamic thresholds relative to collected data.
The best features I've seen so far with DX NetOps are that it can work with large scale systems, and it has a lot of functionalities and matrices.
The most valuable feature in DX NetOps is the topological view, which is the network topological view.
I measure the 70% improvement in customer experience through customer tickets and feedback after resolving issues, where previously, users faced problems and limited time on the platform, and after using ThousandEyes, the user time reached up to five to six hours a day, even for teams possibly totaling 30 hours a day.
ThousandEyes offers the best features including global internet and cloud visibility from distributed vantage points, application and network performance monitoring, real-time outage detection and incident alerts, end-to-end path visualization for rapid troubleshooting, proactive issue demarcation, and historical data.
ThousandEyes has become critical for swift network troubleshooting as well, so anytime that there's potential issues with applications or we want to be proactive in resolving potential issues before they arise, ThousandEyes is really the platform that we're leveraging for WAN monitoring, Wi-Fi, latency, packet loss, etc.
| Product | Mindshare (%) |
|---|---|
| ThousandEyes | 2.0% |
| DX NetOps | 0.7% |
| Other | 97.3% |


| Company Size | Count |
|---|---|
| Small Business | 4 |
| Midsize Enterprise | 1 |
| Large Enterprise | 5 |
| Company Size | Count |
|---|---|
| Small Business | 6 |
| Midsize Enterprise | 3 |
| Large Enterprise | 16 |
DX NetOps by CA Technologies, a Broadcom company, improves your time to value through advanced AI capabilities and unified network visibility that delivers simplified NetOps intelligence into the user experience that traverses modern architectures. DX NetOps accomplishes this through high scale, unified network monitoring that enables full-stack analytics for assuring traditional and modern architectures. DX NetOps converts inventory, topology, device metrics, faults, flow and packet analysis into actionable intelligence for network operations teams. Complimented by our AIOps solution, DX NetOps enables IT teams to establish proactive, autonomous remediation capabilities across the applications, infrastructure, and networks that fuel superior user experiences.
ThousandEyes is a Network Intelligence platform that delivers visibility into every network an organization relies on, whether public or private. ThousandEyes enables users to optimize application delivery, end-user experience and ongoing infrastructure investments.
With cloud, enterprises can innovate much faster, but the growing number of cloud and SaaS applications means that more apps are being delivered over the Internet. This increases dependence on the Internet, a public “best effort” network, and other third-party infrastructures, substantially reducing the ability of IT teams to predict, visualize and control operational behavior. This results in a chaotic and unmanageable IT environment, making issue resolution a time-consuming ordeal, potentially impacting reputation and revenue. ThousandEyes has innovated an approach based on an unmatched distribution of smart agents across the Internet and enterprise, providing visibility all the way to the end user. ThousandEyes gathers and analyzes massive volumes of Network Intelligence data from all of these vantage points, enabling organizations to solve even their most obscure performance problems in minutes. By using ThousandEyes in the planning and testing phases of cloud adoption, customers can also strategically identify and fix underlying problems before production deployment of business-critical applications.
The ThousandEyes solution is ubiquitous across industry sectors, and since launching in mid-2013, customers have come from a diverse set of industry sectors, which include Silicon Valley technology companies, financial services, healthcare, pharmaceuticals, retail, manufacturing and education.
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