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by mwest217
374 days ago
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Disclaimer: I work at Google but not on cloud. Opinions my own. I think the reason this doesn’t get prioritized is that large customers don’t actually want a “stop serving if I pass this limit” amount. If there’s a spike in traffic, they probably would rather pay the money to serve it. The customers that would want this feature are small-dollar customers, and from an economic perspective it makes less sense to prioritize this feature, since they’re not spending very much relative to customers who wouldn’t want this feature. Maybe if there weren’t more feature requests to get prioritized this might happen, but the reality is that there are always more feature requests than time to implement them, and a feature request used almost exclusively by the smallest dollar customers will always lose to a feature for big-dollar customers. |
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Removing a major concern that prevents individuals / small customers from using GCP in the first place; so more of them do use it
That could then lead to value in two ways:
- They make small projects that go on to be large projects later, (e.g. a small app that grows / becomes successful, becomes a moneymaker)
- Or, they might then be more inclined to get their big corp to use GCP later on, if they've already been using it as an individual
But that's long term, and hard to measure / put a number on