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Google App Engine Announces Pricing Plan, APIs, Open Access

Written by Sean Ammirati / May 27, 2008 4:00 PM / 17 Comments

At tomorrow's Google I/O conference, the App Engine team will be making a number of announcements. In advance of the conference, we interviewed Paul McDonald and Pete Koomen, two App Engine product managers, on our podcast show ReadWriteTalk. Specifically, Google will be announcing:

  • Pricing options for additional App Engine resources
  • Two new App Engine APIs
  • Opening up the waiting list

Pricing Options for Additional Resources

According to Pete and Paul, one of the largest feature requests for Google App Engine was the ability to purchase additional computing resources. If you aren't aware, currently App Engine (a developer tool that enables you to run your web applications on Google's infrastructure) provides free access to persistent storage of up to 500 MB and enough bandwidth for about 5 million page views a month.

Currently there is no ability for developers to purchase additional resources. But towards the end of the year, developers will be able to purchase more resources at the following pricing:

* $0.10 - $0.12 per CPU core-hour
* $0.15 - $0.18 per GB-month of storage
* $0.11 - $0.13 per GB outgoing bandwidth
* $0.09 - $0.11 per GB incoming bandwidth

This pricing does seem competitive with similar offerings from Amazon Web Services.

Two New APIs

The Google App Engine team is also releasing two new APIs. The first will allow web developers to easily do image manipulation - i.e. to scale, rotate, and crop images on the server. The second API allows App Engine applications to take advantage of memcached - a high-performance caching layer designed to make page rendering faster for developers.

Removing Waiting Lists

Another announcement tomorrow will be the elimination of all waiting lists for access to the App Engine. Paul and Pete indicated that currently about 75,000 users have received access. However more than 150,000 developers have joined the product's waiting list over the past 6 weeks alone! But on Wednesday, Google App Engine will be available to everyone.

However, note that until the turn of the year when you can purchase additional computing resources, apps will probably be limited to small test apps.

Still No Support for Languages Outside Python

While all of this is great progress, we're sure that many will be disappointed that App Engine is still limited to Python Apps. Shortly after launching Google App Engine, we created an interactive game that asked you to both predict what Google (and others) would do next and voice your opinion about what should happen. Not surprisingly, 55% of you anticipated Google would begin supporting other languages beyond Python.

PlaytheNewsAppEngine

It appears this is not going to be the case. While Pete and Paul indicated that this is on the roadmap, they wouldn't provide timelines or indications on which languages would be next. They did provide some insight however into the process necessary to support additional languages - listen to the podcast for those details.

Conclusion

As we commented yesterday, it's nice to see Google wooing web developers. If App Engine is ultimately successful, they'll need those engineers to choose it over Amazon's offerings or future competition from Microsoft and startups. It will be interesting to read the reaction to the announcements at I/O tomorrow. Let us know what you think in the comments below.



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  1. memcached, not memecached.

    Posted by: Name | May 27, 2008 4:46 PM



  2. fixed memcached.

     Posted by: Richard MacManus Author Profile Page | May 27, 2008 5:00 PM



  3. Hi
    someone would help me ?
    What is the basic price of the service whithout additional computing resources ?

    Posted by: Edmar | May 27, 2008 5:13 PM



  4. Memecached, if it existed, would be wicked.

    Posted by: Simon Law | May 27, 2008 5:19 PM



  5. @Edmar: It's free :) without additional storage and computing resources

    Posted by: Karim | May 27, 2008 5:20 PM



  6. Thanks !

    Its great ! The App Engine will make easy to test new ideas.

    Posted by: Edmar | May 27, 2008 5:27 PM



  7. Nice! I'd like to see PHP support, but I guess beggers can't be choosers. It'll be nice to see what cloud computing will mean for the next generation of web apps.

    Posted by: Chris | May 27, 2008 8:58 PM



  8. If anyone is interested in attending the Google I/O event, please let me know. I have a free ticket courtesy of Readwriteweb and unfortunately last minute travel change is preventing me from attending. Please let me know if anyone is interested.

    You can email me here - freetechzone@gmail.com

    The ticket is free.

    Posted by: Chris S | May 27, 2008 10:57 PM



  9. thats pretty decent pricing and I am glad they are adding the image stuff as you had to go around the houses before to do profile pics. They really need to add some sort of cronjob feature next.

    Posted by: Darren | May 27, 2008 11:01 PM



  10. Chris thank you for the offer i wish i can attend as well but can't get the chance:( maybe another time if there is one.

    Posted by: Sesli Sohbet | May 27, 2008 11:37 PM



  11. Switch to Python people, you won't regret it. Django is great.

    Posted by: John Stirs | May 27, 2008 11:50 PM



  12. I have never once used or read the words "disappointed" and "Python" in the same sentence, unless it's to say something such as, "I'm disappointed this isn't Python."

    Learn Python; in the words of Adrian Monk, "You'll thank me later."

    Posted by: Tom | May 28, 2008 2:52 AM



  13. We will have to learn Python.
    Anyone knows a good tutorial?

    Posted by: TIM | May 28, 2008 8:50 AM



  14. I've gone into the advantages of App Engine over Amazon's Web Services in detail at:

    http://adamfisk.wordpress.com/2008/05/28/where-google-app-engine-spanks-amazons-web-services-s3-ec2-simple-db-sqs/

    It's surprising by how much App Engine wins when it comes to:

    1) Easy scalability
    2) Database details
    3) Pricing

    -Adam

    Posted by: Adam Fisk | May 28, 2008 2:49 PM



  15. wow,it's a great news!
    and the price seems to be fair

    Posted by: sean | May 29, 2008 5:41 AM



  16. thanksss

    Posted by: sesli sohbet | June 13, 2008 5:43 PM



  17. thank you for the offer i wish i can attend as well but can't get the chance:( maybe another time if there is one.

    Posted by: sesli sohbet | June 13, 2008 5:44 PM



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