Summary

Slate is an open-source, customizable framework designed for developers to build rich text editors. It provides the foundational tools and architecture for creating complex editing experiences, similar to those found in platforms like Medium or Google Docs, but it is not an end-user content publishing platform.

Features
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Pricing
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Free

$0.00 monthly
  • Unlimited public/private repositories
  • Dependabot security and version updates
  • 2,000 CI/CD minutes/month (for public repositories)
  • 500MB of Packages storage (for public repositories)
  • Issues & Projects
  • Community support
  • Limited CI/CD minutes and package storage for private repositories
  • Community support only

Team

$4.00 per user
Popular
  • Everything included in Free, plus...
  • Access to GitHub Codespaces
  • Protected branches
  • Multiple reviewers in pull requests
  • Draft pull requests
  • Code owners
  • Required reviewers
  • Pages and Wikis
  • Environment deployment branches and secrets
  • 3,000 CI/CD minutes/month (for public repositories)
  • 2GB of Packages storage (for public repositories)
  • Web-based support

Enterprise

$21.00 per user
  • Everything included in Team, plus...
  • Data residency
  • Enterprise Managed Users
  • User provisioning through SCIM
  • Enterprise Account to centrally manage multiple organizations
  • Environment protection rules
  • Repository rules
  • Audit Log API
  • SOC1, SOC2, type 2 reports annually
  • FedRAMP Tailored Authority to Operate (ATO)
  • SAML single sign-on
  • Advanced auditing
  • GitHub Connect
  • 50,000 CI/CD minutes/month (for public repositories)
  • 50GB of Packages storage (for public repositories)
Rationale

Slate is a framework for building rich text editors, not a content publishing platform itself. It provides the underlying technology for developers to create such platforms, but it does not offer features like content distribution, monetization, or community engagement tools directly to end-users or writers. Therefore, it does not align with the core concept of Medium.