Follow-up from "Initial changes for GitLab subscriptions"
The followup below addresses a few minor style issues (missing a handful of the
s), and verification questions.
The following discussions from !21224 (merged) should be addressed:
-
@marcel.amirault started a discussion: I just want to check, does this mean all public projects, or only public open source projects?
-
@marcel.amirault started a discussion: - A GitLab subscription is based on the number of users. You will pay more than you should if you renew for too many users, while the renewal will fail if you attempt to renew a subscription for too few users.
-
@marcel.amirault started a discussion: The style here seems out of place. Perhaps it should be something like:
"It's important to verify who is accessing your system, ... "?
-
@marcel.amirault started a discussion: 1. Log in to the [Customers Portal](https://customers.gitlab.com/customers/sign_in).
-
@marcel.amirault started a discussion: 1. Log in to the [GitLab.com](https://gitlab.com) account you want to link to the Customers Portal.
-
@marcel.amirault started a discussion: 1. Log in to the [Customers Portal](https://customers.gitlab.com/).
-
@marcel.amirault started a discussion: To renew for more users than are currently active in your GitLab.com system, contact our sales team via `renewals@gitlab.com` for assistance as this can't be done in the Customers Portal.
-
@marcel.amirault started a discussion: If you need to change your [GitLab tier](https://about.gitlab.com/pricing/), contact our sales team via `renewals@gitlab.com` for assistance as this can't be done in the Customers Portal.
Edited by Russell Dickenson