A page of details of customers

AleSSaNDRo

Verified User
Joined
Nov 19, 2004
Messages
108
Location
Milano(Italy)
Please insert in the next version of directadmin a page in which the details can be inserted on the own ones customers(name, last name, rue in which it lives, etc).
It is very useful!

Even insert also one "reminder" that some day consists in sending to the customer an email before the expiration of its domain, than it invites it to hurry to make I renew.
 
There's already a section where you can type in information when you set up a user.

Jeff
 
Where is the comments box?
In the user profile of the particular user...

site-helper.com might have a reference to it but I doubt it. This areay should be accessible from all 3 levels of the controlpanel. (err admin, reseller and user)
 
Ahh... comment box. But it is a serious system for set detailt of customers(client name, last name, address, phone, fax, city).
It is very bad inser the detailt into comment box
 
DirectAdmin is a control panel not a Billing or Customer Management System, look into ModernBill or AgileBill to mention but 2 that will do what you want, the added bonus is that they will integrate with DirectAdmin and automatically create accounts for you :)
 
I understand. :(

I can confirm instead that plesk it is the much best one than directadmin then... I thought you were available to improve it but instead not...
 
AleSSaNDRo,

That reads more like a personal opinion than a fact.

I can certainly understand why you might prefer being forced into being able to keep only specific fields in your database rather than having the freedom of an open database into which you can put what you want.

What I'm not sure I understand is which of these features makes Plesk a better system:

1) The backup system only works within the current version; if you have sites on an old version of Plesk and you want to move them to a new server running a new version of Plesk you have to pay for an updated license for the old server before you do your backup.

2) The backup system results in one monolithic file and you cannot restore one user or one file out of it unless you restore the complete backup to another server (for which you must own a license) first.

3) You pay for your licenses on a per domain basis, so you can't offer plans with unlimited domains unless you buy unlimited licenses from Plesk.

4) You get a mailserver that hasn't been updated by the author since 1998 or 1999.

5) You get a system limited to the versions of all important programs supplied by Plesk in their RPMs.

6) You get a system that will only run on a small subset of available server distributions.

7) You get a system that you can't easily modify from the command line, for example to add DNS records for domains you don't host.

8) You get a system that you will easily break by doing something as simple as updating a library (when we attempted an update from GD 1.x to GD 2 on a Plesk server it took three days (and a hefty bill) for their programming group to fix it for us.

I'm sure I could think of more, but I want to make sure as many people as possible see the whole picture.

Jeff
 
You have reason.
Thanks for the indications. You have convinced to me to remain with directadmin:) It would be but liked to see something to me in more on directadmin why the task that can become still beautifulr.
 
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