
But, for those who use Dynamic Maps, $200 will take care of only 28,000 free page loads per month. And that should be enough to cover the majority of users who have a simple map embedded on their website as mentioned above. You will get the first $200 of monthly usage for free.This is applicable to all users – even those who have a simple map embedded on their website’s contact page. You can no longer use the APIs in the first place unless you create a billing account and hand-over your credit card information to Google.Keyless calls to the Maps JavaScript API and Street View API will return low-resolution maps watermarked with “for development purposes only.”
Beginning June 11, keyless access will no longer be supported.
All projects will need valid API keys, as Google has insisted before as well. Obviously, no direct comparison figures of old and new prices have been provided by Google, but that’s the average surge that is being reported by developers. Google is raising its prices by more than 1,400%. The Standard (no access to customer support) and Premium plans are being merged into one pay-as-you-go pricing plan. But, you wouldn’t need to make any changes in your existing code it will work just fine. The 18 individual APIs Google Maps currently offers are being consolidated into three broad segments – Maps, Routes, and Places. Google is making sweeping changes to its Maps API products. The honeymoon is over, guys – or it will be, on June 11, 2018. This just in: Amazon teams with Esri, HERE to offer location-based data, mapping services