@david @Connor_Finlayson @nathanaelb Hi, I really enjoy this post. It’s necessary to analyze all the parts, but of course, they are requesting that no message appears to end-users when the row limit is reached. They might solve it by deactivating the application so it doesn’t load, as they say. But there’s also your part in this; if it doesn’t load for them and you cut it off, they will contact support because they didn’t realize they reached 25,000 rows. It’s either a crucial application or they are managing it poorly to reach such a number of rows.
In summary, I found this post amusing. What I can contribute is that in the application design panel, it clearly shows how many rows each application consumes. I’ve attached a screenshot; it’s more than enough for the developer to pay attention to that detail, among others, due to the limitations in each plan.