The experience with pricing for Microsoft Azure Container Service depends on the use case and current workload. Based upon that, it can offer different types of SKU sizes because under the hood it is using virtual machines that are based upon some SKUs. Depending upon the requirement, I need to choose the SKU size, and accordingly, my cost will be decided based on the workload being run. The cost-effective features of Microsoft Azure Container Service help my organization with resource optimization because depending upon what services we're using, it reduces 40 to 50% of cost. Earlier, we needed to deploy our services on either virtual machines or bare-metal hardware. Now we are deploying those things over the Azure environment. Azure also offers RI instances (Reserved Instances) that can offer different cost benefits if you procure particular hardware for a couple of years. To take care of cost management, we can enable different alerts that warn you when reaching a particular defined cost limit. We can very easily manage it and take care of all kinds of costs.
The pricing is a big high. I'd rate it five out of ten. It's moderate. We typically get a three-year license that is paid annually. I don't have the exact price. However, it's based on storage usage.
Microsoft Azure Container Service has costs but in the container environment, there are no costs because it is open source and we are using Docker as the container engine in the master and worker nodes established in the Azure environment.
As a cloud platform, there are multiple options available for licensing. The costs depend on the resources that you use, and there is a cost-management system to help calculate it. The number of hours will affect the total cost. The licensing cost is for the support, so it varies depending on the plan and the agreement. In the case of an enterprise-level plan, the cost is an agreement between Microsoft and the organization.
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Azure Container Service optimizes the configuration of popular open source tools and technologies specifically for Azure. You get an open solution that offers portability for both your containers and your application configuration. You select the size, the number of hosts, and choice of orchestrator tools, and Container Service handles everything else.
The experience with pricing for Microsoft Azure Container Service depends on the use case and current workload. Based upon that, it can offer different types of SKU sizes because under the hood it is using virtual machines that are based upon some SKUs. Depending upon the requirement, I need to choose the SKU size, and accordingly, my cost will be decided based on the workload being run. The cost-effective features of Microsoft Azure Container Service help my organization with resource optimization because depending upon what services we're using, it reduces 40 to 50% of cost. Earlier, we needed to deploy our services on either virtual machines or bare-metal hardware. Now we are deploying those things over the Azure environment. Azure also offers RI instances (Reserved Instances) that can offer different cost benefits if you procure particular hardware for a couple of years. To take care of cost management, we can enable different alerts that warn you when reaching a particular defined cost limit. We can very easily manage it and take care of all kinds of costs.
The solution's pricing is reasonable.
The pricing is a big high. I'd rate it five out of ten. It's moderate. We typically get a three-year license that is paid annually. I don't have the exact price. However, it's based on storage usage.
Microsoft Azure Container Service has costs but in the container environment, there are no costs because it is open source and we are using Docker as the container engine in the master and worker nodes established in the Azure environment.
As a cloud platform, there are multiple options available for licensing. The costs depend on the resources that you use, and there is a cost-management system to help calculate it. The number of hours will affect the total cost. The licensing cost is for the support, so it varies depending on the plan and the agreement. In the case of an enterprise-level plan, the cost is an agreement between Microsoft and the organization.
The pricing is good.