Coronium no longer under development.

https://blog.coronium.cloud/the-unknown-element/

Coronium cloud has been incredibly useful for my apps after Parse. 

I’m sorry the development stopped, but I just want to say: Thanks Chris for all your hard work.

I’ve benefited tremendously both from the project and from my interactions with Chris. I am sorry to hear this news.

Chris,

It has been a pleasure, my best to you and your family as you move forward to the next adventure. Just remember to always keep your towel with you. 

Steve

I don’t understand what the actual status is. Earlier Chris said, that he is now at the corona team, working on a cloud service provided by corona. Is that still the case? 

Which roll plays Coronium LS? Is it based on the old Coronium, with the same features? I wonder why coronium LS is not mentioned on the blog entry under “alternative “free” app clouds”.

And can we still install old Coronium instances? What about currently running instances?

Sorry if the questions seems to be a bit dump, Im not deep in coronium and my english isn’t the best. But for my current project I need a cloud service soon, an coronium seems to be the ideal solution.

Thanks!

Chris said, that he is now at the corona team, working on a cloud service provided by corona. 

Chris was brought on board with Corona to help work on their cloud platform based on Coronium.

Is that still the case? 

No, sadly it is not as Corona decided to move in another direction. You will need to ask a representative of the Corona what that direction is.

Which roll plays Coronium LS?

Coronium LS is an open source project available at GitLab. 

http://docs.coronium.cloud/en/latest/

https://gitlab.com/coroniumcloud/Coronium-LS-Install

Is it based on the old Coronium, with the same features?

It is an improved and updated version.

I wonder why coronium LS is not mentioned on the blog entry under “alternative “free” app clouds”.

Those are alternatives to Coronium LS if you are uncomfortable with moving forward knowing that it is no longer a sponsored project and thus has no full-time support.

And can we still install old Coronium instances?

Yes, you can. 

What about currently running instances?

They SHOULD be fine, but there is no guarantee of support going forward (technically there never was)

Sorry if the questions seems to be a bit dump, Im not deep in coronium and my english isn’t the best. But for my current project I need a cloud service soon, an coronium seems to be the ideal solution.

No need to apologize. You are making a business decision that needs information to base it off of. The answer is as always, how much risks are you willing to take on. The code is open source and available so you can modify, patch, update and fix to your hearts content. There in lies the risk, YOU are responsible for maintenance and support. 

Hope I was able to help. Let me know if you have any further questions.

Ok, thanks a lot! Things are a lot clearer now. I have not realized that the blogpost was on the coronium LS blog. 

I will try my luck with coronium LS. For me it seems to be the best solution. 

I’ve benefited tremendously both from the project and from my interactions with Chris. I am sorry to hear this news.

Chris,

It has been a pleasure, my best to you and your family as you move forward to the next adventure. Just remember to always keep your towel with you. 

Steve

I don’t understand what the actual status is. Earlier Chris said, that he is now at the corona team, working on a cloud service provided by corona. Is that still the case? 

Which roll plays Coronium LS? Is it based on the old Coronium, with the same features? I wonder why coronium LS is not mentioned on the blog entry under “alternative “free” app clouds”.

And can we still install old Coronium instances? What about currently running instances?

Sorry if the questions seems to be a bit dump, Im not deep in coronium and my english isn’t the best. But for my current project I need a cloud service soon, an coronium seems to be the ideal solution.

Thanks!

Chris said, that he is now at the corona team, working on a cloud service provided by corona. 

Chris was brought on board with Corona to help work on their cloud platform based on Coronium.

Is that still the case? 

No, sadly it is not as Corona decided to move in another direction. You will need to ask a representative of the Corona what that direction is.

Which roll plays Coronium LS?

Coronium LS is an open source project available at GitLab. 

http://docs.coronium.cloud/en/latest/

https://gitlab.com/coroniumcloud/Coronium-LS-Install

Is it based on the old Coronium, with the same features?

It is an improved and updated version.

I wonder why coronium LS is not mentioned on the blog entry under “alternative “free” app clouds”.

Those are alternatives to Coronium LS if you are uncomfortable with moving forward knowing that it is no longer a sponsored project and thus has no full-time support.

And can we still install old Coronium instances?

Yes, you can. 

What about currently running instances?

They SHOULD be fine, but there is no guarantee of support going forward (technically there never was)

Sorry if the questions seems to be a bit dump, Im not deep in coronium and my english isn’t the best. But for my current project I need a cloud service soon, an coronium seems to be the ideal solution.

No need to apologize. You are making a business decision that needs information to base it off of. The answer is as always, how much risks are you willing to take on. The code is open source and available so you can modify, patch, update and fix to your hearts content. There in lies the risk, YOU are responsible for maintenance and support. 

Hope I was able to help. Let me know if you have any further questions.

Ok, thanks a lot! Things are a lot clearer now. I have not realized that the blogpost was on the coronium LS blog. 

I will try my luck with coronium LS. For me it seems to be the best solution.