I'm not aware of its cost. Its licensing was probably role-wise. Most of us had reader access, editor access, or developer access. For admin, there were certain restrictions. So, I'm assuming it had role-wise licensing.
Consultant at Techknomatic Services Private Limited
Consultant
Aug 4, 2022
I am not majorly involved in its licensing. We are not the end license purchaser of the Dundas BI. It costs somewhere around $4,000 a year for the enterprise solution, but I am not sure.
Business Intelligence Consultant at Siemens Industry
Real User
Feb 28, 2022
The licensing model is fair and quite flexible. The same is true with the setup. You can run it on-premise or in the cloud and on Windows and Linux. We switched from Windows to Linux and were happy with both systems.
System Architect at Yulista Tactical Services, LLC
Real User
Jan 29, 2019
There's a free trial that is long enough to give it a good workout. Also, they will help you get that free trial up and running. It's very easy to get it going and start working in it. They have some good guides and even a course you can take (for free).
Senior Dashboard Implementation Consultant at a consultancy with 11-50 employees
Real User
Jan 28, 2019
Setup and licensing are reasonably priced. Users have two options, either you pay for a named seat, or you can have floating seats that can be shared amongst users. We found that the per-user cost was the biggest expense that we had by far.
Dundas BI is a comprehensive business intelligence tool that supports data cube integration, dashboard personalization, and ETL functions, catering to market research dashboards, BI reports, and data visualizations.Dundas BI offers drag-and-drop features, SharePoint integration, and extensive customization options for diverse data analysis. Though it requires developers for complex settings, it simplifies design tasks with an IDE that manages version control and efficient warehouse query...
I'm not aware of its cost. Its licensing was probably role-wise. Most of us had reader access, editor access, or developer access. For admin, there were certain restrictions. So, I'm assuming it had role-wise licensing.
I am not majorly involved in its licensing. We are not the end license purchaser of the Dundas BI. It costs somewhere around $4,000 a year for the enterprise solution, but I am not sure.
The licensing model is fair and quite flexible. The same is true with the setup. You can run it on-premise or in the cloud and on Windows and Linux. We switched from Windows to Linux and were happy with both systems.
Have an idea of what you want end users to be able to accomplish; this will help drive the discussion when the time comes to look at licensing.
There's a free trial that is long enough to give it a good workout. Also, they will help you get that free trial up and running. It's very easy to get it going and start working in it. They have some good guides and even a course you can take (for free).
It's too different to tell.
Setup and licensing are reasonably priced. Users have two options, either you pay for a named seat, or you can have floating seats that can be shared amongst users. We found that the per-user cost was the biggest expense that we had by far.