Provide the user the tools to make these choices. Give the option to explicitly choose how durable to extreme traffic you want to be. Have the free tier default to "not very durable"
Provide the user the tools to make these choices. Give the option to explicitly choose how durable to extreme traffic you want to be. Have the free tier default to "not very durable"
Bam, you said. They’d do it if they cared, but they don’t and prefer the status quo. 100k surprise bill is the type of thing people kill themselves over. Horrific
You mean like having a billing alert send an event that allows you to trigger custom actions to turn things off? That already exists. It has for years.
So why isn't it the default yet? Why isn't unlimited scaling something you have to turn on?
Because how you personally decide to handle cost overruns is up to you. AWS by itself can’t make that decision for you.
The opposite problem when you do set low limits by default is that you constantly have to submit tickets to AWS to ask for service limit increases.
How is AWS suppose to know whether you want to immediately scale or not?
And before July of this year, there was no such thing as a “free tier AWS account”. There were services that allowed certain amount free.
> How is AWS suppose to know whether you want to immediately scale or not?
Ask? This is not some impossible problem.
Yes, there is a UX challenge to be solved.
But also, doing so is well within the capabilities of a company like Amazon.
They simply have no incentive to help out since there is less money to be made by making it easier to spend less money. And, purely capitalistically, if you have to pick between a potential bug or misconfiguration that causes extra spending you can walk back with customer support, and a bug or misconfiguration that results in extra downtime for your 7+ figure customers, you pick the latter.
Their choice makes sense for their bottom line.
It's still bad UX for many users.
And AWS is suppose to do that across all 230+ services?
But as of July 15th of this year, there is actually a “free tier” that won’t let you spend over $200.
Before there were services with a free tier.