Follow Us

Google announces apps hosting prices

We've got storage ... and lots of it.

Google has announced pricing for its App Engine service for web application hosting, maintaining a free tier, then charging for storage of more than 500MB of data.

The company at its Google I/O conference in San Francisco also will expand access to the service and add APIs for caching and image manipulation. The service has been in a limited preview period since early April.

The pricing plan has developers still getting around 500MB of data and 5 million page views per month for free. After that, developers will pay 15 US cents (8p) to 18 cents (9p) per GB of data stored monthly.

Also, developers will be charged 10 cents to 12 cents per CPU core-hour consumed. On the bandwidth side, developers will pay 11 cents to 13 cents per month per GB of data transferred out of App Engine and 9 cents to 11 cents per month per GB transferred into App Engine, Google said. The pricing schedule is to be effective later this year.

Through its App Engine programme, Google is looking to address the issue of it being too difficult to develop web applications. "With App Engine, we hope to reduce that difficulty," by making the development experience easier and removing the startup costs, said Pete Koomen, product manager for App Engine at Google.

App Engine also will allow anyone to use the service, expanding beyond a list of 10,000 developers that gradually had grown to 60,000 developers. "We've decided to open the floodgates," Koomen said.

More than 150,000 developers have been on the product's waiting list.

With App Engine, developers do not need to concern themselves with such functions as provisioning of machines. "There's a lot there, and it's often very time-consuming," as well as costing money, Koomen said.

Google's caching API for App Engine will make it faster for developers to render applications. An image manipulation API allows developers to transform images like JPEG images in their applications, Koomen said. These images can be resized or rotated.

With App Engine, Google seeks to make the network the centre of power in computing, shifting it away from the desktop, said analyst Al Hilwa, program director for application development programmes at IDC. "That's their strategy, that they're moving the centre of power," he said.






Send to a friend

Email this article to a friend or colleague:

PLEASE NOTE: Your name is used only to let the recipient know who sent the story, and in case of transmission error. Both your name and the recipient's name and address will not be used for any other purpose.

Techworld White Papers

State of software security report volume 4

If your business has anything worth protecting, be it money, intellectual property or a trusted...

Download Whitepaper

New threats demand innovative responses

Financial institutions in the UK remain susceptible to further systemic problems, as challenging...

Download Whitepaper

Delivering a competitive advantage through IT

IT organisations share a common mission; to optimise investments and streamline operations to...

Download Whitepaper

6 tips to mobilise your existing ERP

Enterprise mobile users throughout the global business community will number 1.19 billion by...

Download Whitepaper

Techworld UK - Technology - Business

Techworld Awards

Techworld Awards Winners 2011


Learn who the winners of this year's Techworld Awards are. Video footage coming soon...

Find out more
Techworld Mobile Site

Access Techworld's content on the move

Get the latest news, product reviews and downloads on your mobile device with Techworld's mobile site.

Find out more...

Site Map

* *