Looks interesting for Europeans that don't want their servers accessed / seized by the FBI, but they should clarify if they own the servers or rent them to an US cloud company (Amazon / MS etc).<p>On their data-center page they just show a map with their 2 data-centers (both are in France, they might use OVH).
This is very nice to see another contender in the PaaS arena, one that also uses the mechanisms Heroku put in place. What really remains to be seen, however, is the reliability of the service. Our production app has been on Heroku for over a year now and we've had very little issue with things, and there is certainly a lot that can go wrong in a complex environment.
I like to use PaaS so it is good to see competition. It looks like a 512MB instance is about half way between Heroku hobby and professional plans: $7 to $18 to $25 per month.<p>The Heroku hobby plan, which is what I use, lacks the easy horizontal scaling.
How do you keep containers isolated?<p>Do you just run multiple docker containers from different apps on the same host?<p>Do you provide any sort of network isolation between apps?
What are the uptime metrics on Scalingo? I see there are no uptime guarantees /SLAs. <a href="http://www.paasify.it/vendors/scalingo" rel="nofollow">http://www.paasify.it/vendors/scalingo</a>
Here is heroku's uptime metric by way of benchmark.
<a href="https://status.heroku.com/uptime?region=EU" rel="nofollow">https://status.heroku.com/uptime?region=EU</a>