The pricing page tries to sell that the pricing is easier to understand, no hidden fees etc. Then has to explain the top-up discounts multiple times. I'd remove the whole discounts, it's distracting.
"Wallet" sounds like crypto to me. Maybe it isn't but it's not clear enough "add money to your account" might be sufficient.
The "See The Difference" table. Is it really that different? The header lists a different amount of memory as the table cells. The price difference is about 20% (40 vs 48). Where's the 80% savings from the homepage.
"Perfect Resource Balance - 1:4:50:2000 ratio ensures all resources saturate equally." Sorry, I have no idea what the numbers mean.
Because I have been curious about this for so long, and you said "It's built on mostly open source technology" I figured now's my chance to ask:
Why roll your own control plane when OpenStack ships with so many batteries included, and (arguably important) doesn't require someone making a vanity SDK to interact with your vanity cloud?
A middle ground may be for you to add just the webhook feature <https://docs.cloud-init.io/en/latest/reference/yaml_examples...> so folks could react to newly launched instances and provision them "from outside" or, of course, https://docs.cloud-init.io/en/latest/reference/modules.html#...
"Wallet" sounds like crypto to me. Maybe it isn't but it's not clear enough "add money to your account" might be sufficient.
The "See The Difference" table. Is it really that different? The header lists a different amount of memory as the table cells. The price difference is about 20% (40 vs 48). Where's the 80% savings from the homepage.
"Perfect Resource Balance - 1:4:50:2000 ratio ensures all resources saturate equally." Sorry, I have no idea what the numbers mean.
Why roll your own control plane when OpenStack ships with so many batteries included, and (arguably important) doesn't require someone making a vanity SDK to interact with your vanity cloud?