Depends on which country you are targeting.
In India, it's just that you step in and ask for the manager. Pitch and get their card/number to followup. You also make sure to leave your card and may be a brochure.
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I'm the founder/ceo of this. We launched in beta around a month ago. Looking to know the views of HN community.
In addition to the others mentioned, regulatory issues come to mind. The company I work for hosts applications we are not allowed to host on servers we do not control.
Well, I'm happy with app engine so far, but it would be nice to have an insurance plan in case Google decide to do something which changes that. Possibilities include retiring app engine, changing the pricing significantly, introducing unpalatable restrictions, etc.
Misleading statement. They did not "increase" the price so to speak. The platform came out of beta and into normal pricing mode. The low prices were introductory prices to get developers to use the platform.
Increased back to the original price. Yes. It was not higher than the original price and the prices have gone down a little since. Nice play on words there. :)
even if they hadn't changed their prices to reflect their beta status, it doesn't mean their prices won't change to one which you no longer like. Having an open source alternative means you are not locked into the vendor, and they cannot charge you an exorbitant price.
For me, maintenance of large DBs can be very expensive. Some simple query like select count(*) from where ... can easily cost $10, and mysql will give you it for free.
We host MIT App Inventor on Google App Engine. However we have some folks who want to use App Inventor in locations that have difficulty reaching GAE. Either because they are located on a poor internet connection, or don't have one at all!
I agree. The private case may be more appealing though. App developers might have some enterprise customers who want to run their applications behind a firewall.
Yes, I remember reading that blog post. Couldn't find the link now. The author tried explaining various types of switches and provided best alternatives - one among those is having a hole in the switch. One more is having a 'push' effect on the switch.
I registered yesterday and came to know about it immediately about what he up arrows are. Anyone who's familiar with discussion forums can get it in a while I guess.
But, sure, I think HN should have given a note of this.
Using Alt text is a good idea to keep the space clean and unintuitive.