Data Center Real-User Monitoring (DCRUM), discontinued
Score 7.2 out of 10
N/A
Data Center Real-User Monitoring (DCRUM), also known as Dynatrace Network Application Monitoring (NAM), was an application monitoring solution focusing on user experience, with an emphasis on how the network – especially the WAN – influences user experience. It is a legacy product from Dynatrace, and is no longer sold or supported.
N/A
Microsoft System Center Operations Manager (SCOM)
Score 7.5 out of 10
N/A
Microsoft's System Center Operations Manager (SCOM) is a monitoring and application performance management option, with the core datacenter and cloud-based systems monitoring.
N/A
Pricing
Data Center Real-User Monitoring (DCRUM), discontinued
Microsoft System Center Operations Manager (SCOM)
Editions & Modules
No answers on this topic
No answers on this topic
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Data Center Real-User Monitoring (DCRUM), discontinued
Microsoft System Center Operations Manager (SCOM)
Free Trial
No
No
Free/Freemium Version
No
No
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
No setup fee
No setup fee
Additional Details
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More Pricing Information
Community Pulse
Data Center Real-User Monitoring (DCRUM), discontinued
Microsoft System Center Operations Manager (SCOM)
Features
Data Center Real-User Monitoring (DCRUM), discontinued
Microsoft System Center Operations Manager (SCOM)
Application Performance Management
Comparison of Application Performance Management features of Product A and Product B
Data Center Real-User Monitoring (DCRUM), discontinued
7.2
3 Ratings
6% below category average
Microsoft System Center Operations Manager (SCOM)
6.1
22 Ratings
22% below category average
Application monitoring
7.03 Ratings
5.020 Ratings
Database monitoring
6.03 Ratings
9.022 Ratings
Threshold alerts
7.03 Ratings
10.022 Ratings
Predictive capabilities
8.01 Ratings
2.020 Ratings
Application performance management console
8.03 Ratings
3.019 Ratings
Collaboration tools
8.03 Ratings
6.017 Ratings
Out-of-the box templates to monitor applications
7.03 Ratings
4.020 Ratings
Application dependency mapping and thresholding
8.03 Ratings
4.018 Ratings
Virtualization monitoring
6.03 Ratings
7.020 Ratings
Server availability and performance monitoring
7.03 Ratings
10.021 Ratings
Server usage monitoring and capacity forecasting
7.01 Ratings
8.021 Ratings
IT Asset Discovery
7.02 Ratings
5.018 Ratings
User Ratings
Data Center Real-User Monitoring (DCRUM), discontinued
Data Center Real-User Monitoring (DCRUM), discontinued
Microsoft System Center Operations Manager (SCOM)
Likelihood to Recommend
Discontinued Products
Dynatrace Network Application Monitoring (NAM), formerly DCRUM, has improved greatly compared to when it was DCRUM; however, it still needs a lot of improvement in end-to-end flow capture with regards to network monitoring. Its alerting and integration capabilities are very good and easy to use. But it still needs a lot of tweaking in usability.
Dynatrace DCRUM can monitor legacy application protocols that are still used in a lot of organizations worldwide who still trust in those technologies.
DCRUM monitors client-server architectures very well and can pinpoint issues along an infrastructure stack.
Dynatrace DCRUM can analyze a wide spectre of protocols: Corba, DNS, DB2, Exchange, TCP, HTTP, IBM MQ, Citrix, ICMP, Informix, Tuxedo, SMB, LDAP, MSRPC, MySQL, NetFlow, Net8, Oracle Forms, RMI, SAP GUI, SAP HANA, SAP RFC, SMB, SOAP, XML.
One of the biggest drawbacks to SCOM is the sheer scope and complexity of the system. This can be a pro and a con. The system is very customizable, what you put into it is what you'll get out of it. That said, the learning curve is fairly steep. An organization needs to be committed to putting time and resources into SCOM to get the most out of it. I've heard stories from colleagues of several different companies that invested in SCOM and then abandoned it due to the excessive time and care required.
SCOM is expensive. Not only is the enterprise licensing costly, SCOM requires it's own servers, operational and warehouse databases to be maintained.
The OOB SCOM reports are a bit clunky and feel outdated.
Nagios can't trace real user transactions from a front-end tier through a backend-tier,;with Nagios you only can monitor server availability and hardware issues. Riverbed is commonly used to determine networking issues without considering real user transactions impact on an application stack.
We used Altiris and WSUS and in the beginning Altiris had the better admin interface than SCOM, but it is no longer the case as SCOM has refined their admin interface. Altiris still has better and more robust group assignments for management roles and those two other tools can better manage non Windows OS devices than SCOM but for a large enterprise Windows shop, if you can afford it, SCOM is the way to go.