|
|
|
|
|
by deadmik3
3224 days ago
|
|
I can't speak much for OpenShift.io, which is a different product and as another commenter mentioned is just one way to work with OpenShift, with added team-based features on top of OpenShift. For instant Online hosted access, our Pro tier will immediately allow you to create an account if you sign up today. On our Starter (free) tier we are working hard to provision as many new user accounts as we can (this week we were able to allow in 2,000 new users). Both of these are accessible at openshift.com And of course, there is the possibility of hosting your own OpenShift cluster for free (the project is open source), which was more my intention of recommending a kubectl wrapper for the above poster. |
|
If the new $50/mo Pro Tier and free Starter account has already been advertised in any way, my experience should tell you that it was ineffective... (just so you know)
Maybe this was done on purpose because you can only allow a limited number of users in while remaining within capacity (so telling all of your old Developer Preview users they can now go ahead and hit up this new free tier all at once is maybe a recipe for exactly what situation you're trying to avoid)
But until I found out otherwise in this thread, I was still under the impression that the only remaining ways for me to use OpenShift (after the Developer Preview was ended) were, to spin one up by hand and host it for ourselves, or to pay something like $10,000 for a managed cluster on AWS.
Edit: I just found an announcement of OpenShift Online Pro Tier in an e-mail dated July 31. So it looks like I'm not actually too far behind the curve; and it was announced, I just didn't read it...