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Multi-source AI news clustered, deduplicated, and scored 0–100 across authority, cluster strength, headline signal, and time decay.

  1. Changes to Hosting on Replit

    Replit is phasing out its legacy "Always On" hosting service, directing users to its newer "Deployments" product by January 1, 2024. This transition aims to offer improved performance, security, and scalability. Users will have three months to migrate their applications, with migration guides and cost estimators available to ease the process. Replit is also adjusting its pricing and domain structures to align with the new Deployments offerings. AI

    Changes to Hosting on Replit

    IMPACT Minimal direct impact for AI operators; primarily affects web application hosting.

  2. Announcing more power and changes to pricing

    Replit is updating its pricing and benefits for paid users, with changes rolling out over the next few weeks. The company is introducing new Boost levels, offering up to 32x the base offering for more powerful computing resources. Existing customers will maintain their current pricing and benefits until April 3rd, and the free tier remains unchanged to support Replit's mission of bringing more creators online. AI

    Announcing more power and changes to pricing

    IMPACT Introduces higher compute tiers for resource-intensive applications, potentially enabling more complex AI development on the platform.

  3. Hosting Apps with Always On

    Replit has launched an "Always On" feature for its platform, allowing users to keep up to five applications running continuously. This new functionality is available to all users with a Hacker plan, while free plan users can access it via "Cycles." The Always On feature addresses a key limitation where applications would go dormant after periods of inactivity, enabling persistent hosting for services like Discord bots, web servers, and scheduled cron jobs. AI

    Hosting Apps with Always On

    IMPACT Enables developers to host applications continuously, removing a key barrier for deploying persistent services.