gebu8f Posted December 20, 2024 Posted December 20, 2024 Hello, I want to upgrade to the Morty plan, but the official website shows the text "Starting soon", what should I do?Because the CPU and memory limits of my Tommy plan are about to be reached. 1 Quote
MoneyBroz Posted December 20, 2024 Posted December 20, 2024 You can switch to Morty here: https://heliohost.org/dashboard/move/ Only the prepay option is available right now. the monthly one is coming soon. Quote
gebu8f Posted December 20, 2024 Author Posted December 20, 2024 I would like to ask what is the billing principle of Morty Plan? I saw this paragraph "On Morty, you'll be charged for overages at the rate of $0.0005 per gigabyte of memory, and $0.005 per 1k CPU up to a maximum of $25 per month depending on how much load your website uses." Quote
gebu8f Posted December 21, 2024 Author Posted December 21, 2024 I would like to ask what is the billing principle of Morty Plan? I saw this paragraph "On Morty, you'll be charged for overages at the rate of $0.0005 per gigabyte of memory, and $0.005 per 1k CPU up to a maximum of $25 per month depending on how much load your website uses." Quote
KazVee Posted December 21, 2024 Posted December 21, 2024 Please do not post the same question multiple times in the forum. I have merged the questions into a single place. Quote
KazVee Posted December 21, 2024 Posted December 21, 2024 I am asking you a 2nd time not to post the same question multiple times on the forum. The new topic, that you created after you were asked the first time (https://helionet.org/index/topic/63171-how-is-morty-plan-charged), has been closed with a reference to this thread. Quote
wolstech Posted December 21, 2024 Posted December 21, 2024 2 hours ago, gebu8f said: I would like to ask what is the billing principle of Morty Plan? I saw this paragraph "On Morty, you'll be charged for overages at the rate of $0.0005 per gigabyte of memory, and $0.005 per 1k CPU up to a maximum of $25 per month depending on how much load your website uses." That's pretty much it. The more you use the more you pay. Right now, Morty is only offered as a prepaid plan. You add money to the account up front, and the cost of the services are deducted each month as you use it. The first 10k CPU and 100GB RAM each day are included in the base rate of $1/month, so if you never go above 10k CPU or 100GB RAM on any day during a month, your account will only cost $1 for that month. The overage rates above apply for usage in excess of those limits. If the account runs out of money, it moves itself back to Tommy (and if it's overusing, gets suspended for high load). Load is calculated the same way it is in Tommy and Johnny, sampled every 60 seconds and summed up over a 24 hour period. You can view your load here: https://heliohost.org/dashboard/load/ Quote
gebu8f Posted December 21, 2024 Author Posted December 21, 2024 (edited) Okay, thank you. Edited December 21, 2024 by gebu8f Quote
gebu8f Posted December 21, 2024 Author Posted December 21, 2024 Then I would like to ask again about the upcoming Morty plan and the Morty Prepay plan. What is the difference between the two? Quote
wolstech Posted December 21, 2024 Posted December 21, 2024 The prepay you put money in the account up front and the money is used as you go. The regular (subscription) Morty has a recurring charge to your paypal account at the end of each month to pay the bill instead of paying us up front and using the credit over time. This plan isn't available yet. Quote
gebu8f Posted December 21, 2024 Author Posted December 21, 2024 So is this now unavailable Morty plan also unlimited CPU and memory? Quote
gebu8f Posted December 21, 2024 Author Posted December 21, 2024 By the way, when will the plan be released? I prefer the monthly subscription. Quote
wolstech Posted December 21, 2024 Posted December 21, 2024 The only difference in the two is the payment model, the actual hosting service is the same. As with all things around here, there's no timeline for when will be releasing a subscription version of Morty since we're all volunteers and don't know when it will be finished. Quote
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