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by tyldum
2887 days ago
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When my company subscribed there was only a community and enterprise tier.
Now this has become the starter edition and I feel we are losing a lot of value.
We are 200 employees, but only 10 developers using the advanced features. We really want to make GitLab our hub (GitOps and all), however the the cost of going beyond starter edition is mind blowing (x5).
So if we are to embrace GitLab further we must abandon the idea of letting the whole company use GitLab freely and limit it to devs only. Being small doesn't mean that we are not in need if advanced features, we just have a smaller scale. Also as our initial tier was the top tier, and now is the bottom one, I fear GitLab will fence off future functionality with even more tiers at random. Further, the tiers creates some artificial barriers where we several times feel the some of the new features we receive are just barely functioning and are just there to entice you to upgrade to the next tier. We are all in all very happy with GitLab, however we are no longer pushing it as a central hub for the company. |
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Our 275 users are an eclectic mix. There are a few projects that really pound the product, there are lots of internal playground repositories, and even a few non-technical documentation repositories. The requirements are scattered.
I think that that perhaps 25 of the 275 users have need for Ultimate Edition, but that is not possible, we'd have to pay $325.000 for the pleasure. And that is going nowhere.
An interesting question then is what do we do next? Perhaps our innersourcing strategy has to go, and each team will get to choose their own platform. People will chose what they know, and soon most will be on GitHub.