Will Microsoft Azure charge me after FREE TRIAL ends? [closed] - azure

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I have a free Azure account but now I have decided to never use it again. Will I be charged even after the trial period ends.

At the end of the trial period, Microsoft will notify you and you'll have to decide whether you want to upgrade your subscription to a 'pay-as-you-go' pricing model and remove the spending limit. If you do, you’ll have access to free products. If you don’t, your account and products will be disabled, and you’ll need to upgrade to resume usage.
Having access to the free products (see the full list here), note that you won't be charged if you respect the quotas specified for the free products but you will be charged for extra consumption or for using services that are not part of the free products offer.
I hope this makes sense.

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Can I enable Azure Cosmos DB free tier multiple times (one at a time)? [closed]

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I know that "There’s a maximum of one free tier account per Azure subscription", but does it mean maximum one at a time or maximum one in total? In case of the first option, if I deleted the account for which I had enabled free tier, I would be able to use when I create a new one.
but does it mean maximum one at a time or maximum one in total?
It is maximum one at a time. You can delete a free tier account and create another one targeting the same or different API. For example, you can first create a free tier account targeting SQL API, delete it and create another free tier account targeting SQL API or Gremlin (or any other API).

Azure Site Recovery guarantees a two-hour Recovery Time Objective for Azure-to-Azure Failover. For any type of workload? [closed]

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The SLA states For each Protected Instance configured for Azure-to-Azure Failover, we guarantee a two-hour Recovery Time Objective
I then read something contradictory on a Microsoft blog - From a design perspective it is nearly impossible to guarantee specific RPOs and RTOs for these type of solutions because many variables are outside of your control..When designing for RTO it is important to understand the variables that are not always in your control. For example, if someone initiates a restore, the time it takes to be back up and running is dependent on variables like the size of the restore, available network bandwidth, speed of the disk drives/VMs, etc.
Can any service (not just ASR) guarantee specific RPOs and RTOs?
For the supported configurations mentioned in the link ,ASR guarantees 2 hour recovery. However, there are some limitations where specified SLA is not applicable.Here are the limitations .

When will Azure (US West) support small VM websites? [closed]

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I'm currently unable to create a small dedicated website. I'm getting this error:
Not enough available reserved instance servers to satisfy this request.
Anyone from Azure able to comment on when we can expect this size to be available in the US West region?
You might want to post this on Azure Forum - http://www.windowsazure.com/en-us/support/forums/
Usually Azure doesn't provide any time estimates for resource availability.
Consider deploying to a different DC, latency difference may not be much different.

By Azure Scaling how much bill charged [closed]

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How can we find out how much money we are saving by scaling (via increasing and decreasing instance) our Windows Azure application?
Also, is there a way to find out how much database storage is used and its cost, and how much bandwidth is used and its cost?
I don't believe there is currently any way to measure in an immediate way how your Windows Azure application changes affect your billing and usage. There is, however, a feature request for a billing/usage API you could vote on.
SQL Azure includes two system views that can detail your storage and bandwidth usage.
The sys.database_usage view lists the number, type, and duration of
databases on the server and the sys.bandwidth_usage view describes the
bandwidth used with each database.
The above was excerpted from this article.
Additional Links
In particular - How to find acrued billing charges for Windows Azure
In general - Search Stack Overflow for "Azure Billing"

Good Usage Based Payment Service [closed]

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Amazon Flexible Payments Service seems like the perfect service. It is exactly what we're looking for.
Unfortunately, since we are not based in US (based in UK instead) it is not available to us.
I was wondering if anyone knew of a similar service which we can use?
We would like to sell products in both US Dollars and GB Pounds.
We need to add payment for a usage based service. The payment is similar to Amazon S3 where the customer is charged $0.1 (or similar) for every usage.
We would prefer a prepaid service. The very first time customer signs up they are charged $5 and credited that amount. They use the service until the $5 is used up. The customer should then automatically be charged another $5 to add to prepaid credit.
Or something similar would be good.
Any ideas?
I have been in contact with the FPS team and they tell me a US company is not required. But you must have a US address, bank account and credit card. With a global bank such as HSBC this may well be possible. We are currently attempting to do this, and I will be happy to keep you updated with our progress.
Damien.
PayPal wouldn't work for you?

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