However, I think there is a deeper issue here which is that 50k
datastore operations per day really isn't much. It's actually
somewhat hard to run a hobby project on appengine within the free
tier. The subject of this thread should really be "Google App Engine
no longer for intermediate, casual hobbysts". Shrug. When the
billing switches over, I need to decide if it's worth spending $9/mo
to continue running my old Mobcast app for the few hundred existing
users or just to pull the plug (hell, I don't even have an iPhone
anymore).
Jeff
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That would be "lattes".
Jeff
--
Also, maybe you can come up with some different business model from
the PHP developers. Who knows, maybe you'll be able to become a
market leader in that area.
App Engine is a global app and hence subject to arbitrage
conditions. Given their target markets, their price point will likely
be setup for the going rates in the higher priced markets.
Robert
GAE used to be priced for the low-end. Now it's priced for the
high-end. It's still cheap by US-startup standards, but I can see how
that could be catastrophic if your customers are in Haiti, sub-Saharan
Africa, or certain parts of India.
Unfortunately I don't know the answer. Pricing internationally has
always been hard because different countries have different price
sensitivities. Back when I was serving porn we worked with a company
called Local Billing which set up prices based on an index of what "a
pizza and a beer" costs in the local currency. But that really only
works for products with zero marginal cost of sales.
I don't know if Google can or will help you, but all of the people
I've met on the GAE team have been great folks. My advice is to reach
out to one of them, explain your business, and ask if there is
anything they can do for you. Maybe the answer is 'nothing', but it
doesn't hurt to ask.
As a fallback, Robert's suggestion about using namespaces is a good one.
Jeff
It's simple: stop enforcing a minimum spend of $9/month. Let the guy
pre-pay $10 into his account so he can cover his $0.07 costs without
being ripped-off 4x for services not delivered.