Also while the Web UI has been AJAX-enabled there's a lot more that Ipswitch could do to reduce the need for whole screen refreshes. For example, if you click on a device name in the "breadcrumb trail" at the top of a device status display, you get a list that doesn't look at all like the main device list. The Web interface is good but has its rough edges.
#Ipswitch whatsup gold lot of devices in uknown status windows#
WUG has a Windows console as well as a Web interface that provides more or less the same functionality. What does take time and effort is the usual stuff of network management systems: Running the discovery and mapping process and then organizing the devices and configuring them so they send SNMP traps and Syslog messages to the management system, configuring actions to be executed on network events, and so on.
WUG is really straightforward to set up so I won't waste time detailing the process. As you might have guessed, WUG is designed primarily for Windows, although with its SNMP support it can monitor any SNMP-enabled device. The premium edition I tested includes all of the basic WhatsUp Gold features and adds monitoring of MS SQL Server, MS Exchange, and lets you use any Windows Management Interface counters to make custom performance monitors. The core features of WUG are device discovery and mapping (you can use SNMP testing, IP address pinging and SMB Network Neighborhood scanning), real-time monitoring and management, customizable status change notification, reporting, an AJAX-enabled Web interface that provides monitoring and reporting, and a product edition – WhatsUp Gold Distributed - that supports multiple site network management.