It is an open-source tool. There are no additional fees or charges associated with the product. Expenses are associated with only the machines that our company uses on AWS.
The open source Apache Airflow is a free to use. It itself does not incur any cost. But the managed solution by AWS or GCP have cost and other packaged product like Astronomer too.
Although Airflow is open source software, there's also commercial support for it by Astronomer. We personally don't use the commercial support, but it's always an option if you don't mind the extra cost.
Apache Airflow is a Python-based platform that simplifies task scheduling, workflow orchestration, and monitoring of ETL processes with a user-friendly UI and integration capabilities.Apache Airflow facilitates workflow automation through its open-source framework, offering extensive customization and scalability. Users benefit from its visual DAG representation, event-based scheduling, and task retry functionality. Frequent updates and rich integration features allow seamless interaction...
We don't experience issues with pricing as Apache Airflow is part of a larger platform. It is a sub-feature and not an individual purchase.
I prefer using the open-source version rather than the enterprise version, which helps manage costs.
Apache Airflow is a community-based platform and is not a licensed product.
Apache Airflow is open-source and free. Hyperscalers like Google (with Composer), Azure, and AWS offer managed Airflow services.
It is an open-source tool. There are no additional fees or charges associated with the product. Expenses are associated with only the machines that our company uses on AWS.
The pricing is on the higher side.
Apache Airflow is a cheap solution.
For the time being, it doesn't cost anything.
The cost is quite affordable. I would rate it two out of ten.
As far as I know, Apache Airflow is a product that is free of licenses, meaning there is no need to buy a license.
The solution is cheap.
Apache Airflow is a cheap solution.
The solution is free if you use Amazon AWS.
The solution is open source.
It's open-source.
Apache Airflow is open-source and free of charge.
Apache Airflow is open source, so I cannot comment on licensing costs.
We use a community edition of Apache Airflow. It is open-source and free.
The open source Apache Airflow is a free to use. It itself does not incur any cost. But the managed solution by AWS or GCP have cost and other packaged product like Astronomer too.
We are using the open-source version of Apache Airflow.
Although Airflow is open source software, there's also commercial support for it by Astronomer. We personally don't use the commercial support, but it's always an option if you don't mind the extra cost.
The pricing for the product is reasonable.
This product is open-source.
There are no costs associated with this solution. Apache Airflow is a free solution that can be downloaded and ready for use at any moment.