GitHub Models New Manage and compare prompts
github.comSummary
Ask questionsGitHub Models is a platform designed for developers to build, test, and deploy AI-powered projects. It allows users to manage and version AI prompts, run side-by-side evaluations of different models, and integrate AI capabilities directly into their GitHub workflows.
Features0/12
See allNo common features found
PricingTiered
See allFree
- Unlimited public/private repositories
- Dependabot security and version updates
- 2,000 CI/CD minutes/month (Free for public repositories)
- 500MB of Packages storage (Free for public repositories)
- Issues & Projects
- Community support
- Limited CI/CD minutes
- Limited Package storage
Team
- Everything included in Free, plus...
- Access to GitHub Codespaces
- Repository rules
- 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 (Free for public repositories)
- 2GB of Packages storage (Free for public repositories)
- Web-based support
Enterprise
- 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 (Free for public repositories)
- 50GB of Packages storage (Free for public repositories)
Rationale
GitHub Models is a platform for building AI-powered projects, focusing on managing and comparing AI models and prompts. It is designed for developers and teams to integrate AI into their workflows, offering features like side-by-side model evaluations, prompt versioning, and secure deployment within GitHub and Azure infrastructure. This product is not a social bookmarking or link curation web app. It does not offer any of the 'must-have' features such as URL saving and preview, list and section organization, contextual side notes, or public sharing of curated links. Its core functionality is entirely different from the URList concept.