This looks great!

If anyone has luck using this in a classroom environment, it would be great 
to see actual cost figures.

We end up provisioning at least a gig of ram per classroom user, some of 
our research users end up using much more. $300 per year would be amazing!


On Thursday, July 13, 2017 at 6:24:58 AM UTC-4, Matthias Bussonnier wrote:
>
> I would suggest reading 
> http://zero-to-jupyterhub.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ recently announce 
> on our blog: 
> http://blog.jupyter.org/2017/06/29/introducing-the-helm-chart-for-jupyterhub-deployment-with-kubernetes/
>  
>
> You'll get instruction on how to deploy a hub on google cloud in ~30 
> minutes. Google cloud offers you $300 free when you sign up which 
> should easily last you a year. Otherwise why not attempt to use binder 
> (the beta version is super fast and should stabilize soon: 
>
> https://beta.mybinder.org/ 
>
> -- 
> M 
>
> On Thu, Jul 13, 2017 at 1:52 AM, Jason Stedman <nam...@gmail.com 
> <javascript:>> wrote: 
> > Karthik, 
> > 
> > We run classes using JupyterHub where I work. 
> > 
> > Unfortunately to do this at classroom scale takes significant memory 
> resources. The smallest one can really get away with is 1GB of server ram 
> per user. This means if you have even a small class of 15 students, you 
> really need a 16GB server minimum to host a JupyterHub environment. 
> > 
> > This is well beyond the free tier offerings of any cloud provider. 
> > 
> > If you are only concerned about sharing the notebooks themselves, I 
> would suggest continuing to have each user run their own Jupyter server 
> using Docker and have the base image include git or wget so the users can 
> download your notebooks from the free hosting options that do exist. 
> > 
> > If you do have local or cloud hosted resources(or budget) with 
> sufficient memory available then you are just looking at Docker and network 
> configuration to expose the hub to the local network or internet. You would 
> then need to obtain a certificate for https which is pretty much required, 
> but can be obtained for free from a few good sources. 
> > 
> > I hope this helps put things in perspective. 
> > 
> > Jason 
> > 
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