Thanks Nick, I guess I will have to do the data conversion on multiple
days then.

On Aug 7, 10:47 am, "Nick Johnson (Google)" <[email protected]>
wrote:
> Hi mback2k,
>
> That's correct. The reason for this is that only CPU time is a billed
> quota - datastore CPU time is a non-billed quota, and there to provide
> transparency, as well as to prevent accidental abuse.
>
> By enabling billing, you can, of course, use a lot more than 6.5 CPU
> hours a day.
>
> -Nick Johnson
>
> On Fri, Aug 7, 2009 at 9:41 AM,
>
>
>
>
>
> [email protected]<[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Hello everyone,
>
> > it seems like the used Datastore CPU Time is also counted against the
> > general CPU Time quota. At least that is my guess after watching my
> > CPU Time usage grow while using the remote API for datastore gets and
> > puts. Current example quota:
>
> > CPU Time: 19%, 1.20 of 6.50 CPU hours
> > Datastore CPU Time: 2%, 1.18 of 62.11 CPU hours
>
> > Is this correct? If that is the case, is there any reason for this? I
> > don't see why I have 62.11 Datastore CPU hours available, while I can
> > only use ~6.50 of them. And even that is not correct, because every
> > query requires a minimum amount of general CPU time.
>
> > Thanks in advance.
>
> > Best regards,
> > Marc
>
> --
> Nick Johnson, Developer Programs Engineer, App Engine
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