See this idea: Google AdSense on App Engine
http://groups.google.com/group/google-appengine/browse_thread/thread/416f671a246a3e07#
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On Feb 24, 10:30 pm, Jeff S j...@google.com wrote:
Hi all,
We've just announced that it is now possible to purchase additional
quota for your application.
Hi Andy,
On Fri, Feb 27, 2009 at 8:12 AM, Andy Freeman ana...@earthlink.net wrote:
Is there any way for an application to know that it's run into quota
problems or, better yet, where it is wrt usage.
This would be useful for applications that have some flexibility in
how they behave (some
Is there any way for an application to know that it's run into quota
problems or, better yet, where it is wrt usage.
This would be useful for applications that have some flexibility in
how they behave (some can adjust refresh rates) and could also be used
to trigger an e-mail to an
It's just me or Brazil is not on the list of available countries able
to purchase additional Quota?
Thanks
On Feb 24, 6:30 pm, Jeff S j...@google.com wrote:
Hi all,
We've just announced that it is now possible to purchase additional
quota for your application. To borrow from our blog post,
Hi RAT,
You are correct. Here's an FAQ on how to proceed if you are in one of
these unlisted countries:
http://code.google.com/appengine/kb/billing.html#unlisted
Happy coding,
Jeff
On Feb 26, 1:22 pm, RAT rafael.t...@gmail.com wrote:
It's just me or Brazil is not on the list of available
How can '...An application operating entirely within the free quotas
can process around 30 active dynamic requests at any given moment...'
if maximum rate for CPU time within free default quota is 15 CPU-min/
min ? Should you correct that statement to 15 active dynamic
requests ?
Pozdrav,
There is a cap at 3 Request per Second. well I surely know that ,
flikr,facebook,youtube or any big out there is getting more hits than
that...
so possibility of making some next generation supercool site only on
google app engine is impossible ??
{ yeh , i know , the chances that my
Hi Matija,
The per-minute CPU limit is independent of the number of active
requests you can run. Let's assume your requests were taking on
average 200ms of CPU time and completed in 200ms wall clock time, to
keep things simple. There are at least three limits that come into
play here.
hi peter
is the per-minute CPU Time quota expandable with the new billing
options?
brian
On Feb 25, 9:39 am, Pete Koomen pkoo...@google.com wrote:
Hi Matija,
The per-minute CPU limit is independent of the number of active
requests you can run. Let's assume your requests were taking on
I am watching your changes in the quota system from the perspective of
wanting to run massive parallel applications on it. Considered that
way, the changes are a definite improvement, though not quite to the
point where it would be worth it for us. In particular, if I read
your docs right, one
Note: CPU time is charged at a rate of $0.10 per *hour*--time is
measured by the second, and we round up to the nearest cent, so using
30 minutes of usage beyond the free threshold on a given day would
cost $0.05 :)
Pete
On Feb 25, 8:05 am, Mike tutu...@gmail.com wrote:
I am watching your
Hi Peter,
I understand that 30 active simultaneous limit is only for free quota
apps and I have already enabled billing.
Let's forget for now about request/min quota. Point is that 'free'
apps could have for half minute long up to 30 000ms/sec burst rate (30
active dynamic requests), but next
At work, a run of our primary app occupies 1400 cores (700 real
cores?) for several hours. So, I might estimate that that'd cost
something like $200 per run. Not negligible, given that the hardware
cost is already partly sunk. Like I said, I know this isn't Google's
goal necessarily, but it
Congratulations to the entire App Engine team for rolling out this
much requested feature.
There seems to be an inconsistency in the cited storage pricing. The
blog post says $0.15/GB/mo, but the docs and my app dashboard say
$0.005/GB/mo, which is a huge drop in pricing if correct.
Which one
Hi Bill,
I seems Brett replied to your initial post (
http://groups.google.com/group/google-appengine/browse_thread/thread/07365a8c5bcb2c0e
)
to quote:
Were do you see $0.005/GB/mo? On the settings page and Dashboard we're
showing the *daily* cost per GB, since that is how we compute actual
On Feb 24, 1:44 pm, Jeff S j...@google.com wrote:
Were do you see $0.005/GB/mo? On the settings page and Dashboard we're
showing the *daily* cost per GB, since that is how we compute actual
cost. 30 * 0.005 = $0.15GB/day.
I think the time unit needs to be clarified. In the billing doc
On Tue, Feb 24, 2009 at 1:53 PM, Bill billk...@gmail.com wrote:
On Feb 24, 1:44 pm, Jeff S j...@google.com wrote:
Were do you see $0.005/GB/mo? On the settings page and Dashboard we're
showing the *daily* cost per GB, since that is how we compute actual
cost. 30 * 0.005 = $0.15GB/day.
I
Fantastic! While personally I hope not to have to shell out too much
coin, I'll contribute my $0.02 now and then. ;-)
I can quite sincerely thank Google for teaching this old dog new
tricks. I have an application (Wine by the Bar) that runs on the
Android phone and is backed by GAE. Throw in
I'm still a bit confusedcan we now upload files larger than 1MB or
can we just upload more than the 1 GB total storage quota. For
example, can my blob property be the equivalent of a 50MB video file?
On Feb 24, 5:38 pm, Tom M. thomasfmc...@gmail.com wrote:
Fantastic! While personally I
Hi bej34,
No, the 1MB size limit for a datastore entity is still in place, but
now you could store more of them ;-) Also if this is a file which is
being uploaded to your application, the size limit is 10MB, but it
sounded like you meant items in the datastore.
Thank you,
Jeff
On Feb 24, 5:30
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