Newsletter Subject

Introducing paid subscriptions on GitLab.com & more from GitLab

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gitlab.com

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news@gitlab.com

Sent On

Wed, Apr 12, 2017 07:18 PM

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Read the latest news about GitLab and recent releases. Introducing paid subscriptions on GitLab.com

Read the latest news about GitLab and recent releases. [GitLab]( Introducing paid subscriptions on GitLab.com [Read more]( For the past few years, we've run GitLab.com as our free SaaS offering, featuring unlimited public and private repositories, unlimited contributors, and access to key features, like issue tracking, code review, CI, and wikis. None of those things is changing! We're committed to providing an integrated solution that supports the entire software development lifecycle at a price where everyone can contribute. So what's changing? Over time, the usage of GitLab.com has grown significantly to the point where we now have over two million projects hosted on GitLab.com and have seen a 16x increase in CI usage over the last year. While we're excited by the exponential growth of GitLab.com, we also want to ensure that we can maintain our commitment to offering a free plan with unlimited private repos, unlimited contributors, and access to the key features that allow you to bring your entire software development lifecycle into a single platform. To keep this commitment and to offer users who have more specialized needs access to additional enterprise features, we're introducing new paid subscriptions to GitLab.com. Upcoming Runner Changes for GitLab.com [Get more information]( Recent improvements to GitLab Runner have made processing CI pipelines significantly more efficient and responsive. To take advantage of the changes, GitLab-provided shared runners have been upgraded, and we encourage users to update their private runners as well. In addition, private runners older than version 1.9.0 will soon be throttled when checking for new jobs. Please read on for more details. Webcast: Why You Should Move to Git [Register now]( Using Git to develop software is faster, more cost effective and more collaborative, which means you can deliver great features early and often. If your organization is using a legacy system, it can be intimidating to make the switch. But there’s a reason why Git is the most popular version control system for developing software today. Join us for a live panel discussion about why you should move to Git, with guest speaker Tobias Günther, CEO of Tower, GitLab Technical Writing Lead Sean Packham, and Product Manager Victor Wu. Do you want to shape the future of GitLab? [Join GitLab's research panel]( We want your feedback on how we can continue to improve GitLab. By joining our research panel, you’ll be the first to see new features and your thoughts will drive product improvements for a better user experience. As a thank you for your time, you’ll have the opportunity to earn gift cards and win awesome tech prizes. Why collaboration tools matter [Read more]( Tools that foster collaboration and information sharing throughout the software development process are becoming ever more important as enterprises move towards a DevOps culture. With a majority of developers considering chat and collaboration tools to be essential to their jobs, teams that rely on meetings in person may get left behind. [We're Hiring]( We're Hiring [Read Listings]( [Get In Touch]( Get In Touch [Contact Us]( [Contact Sales]( [about.gitlab.com]( [Login]( We want feedback on this newsletter! Please reply if you have requests or ideas for improvement. This email was sent to [{EMAIL}](. If you no longer wish to receive notifications please [unsubscribe]( here.

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