Bugsense

Bugsense is a crash reporter for mobile phones. It collects and analyzes crash reports, performance and quality of applications on mobiles,[1] which forwards them to the creators of those applications to act on them. Supported platforms include Android, iOS, Windows Phone 7, Windows Phone, Windows 8 and HTML 5.[2]

Bugsense
Private Company
IndustryMobile application development
Founded2011
FounderJon Vlachogiannis, Panayiotis Papadopoulos
HeadquartersAthens, Greece
Websitewww.bugsense.com

History

The company was founded in 2011 by Jon Vlachogiannis and Panayiotis Papadopoulos.[3] Initial funds ($100.000)[3] were acquired by Silicon Valley Greek Seed Funding Group.[4] Bugsense expanded to supporting more than 30000 developers and companies, including Samsung, SoundCloud, and Trulia[5] and has a market share of 3.43% of all apps.[6] In September 2013, Bugsense was acquired by Splunk.[7]

gollark: I sort of like writing JS but feel guilty about it because my code will inevitably break when it hits an error condition of some sort and/or a dependency implodes, Rust is a much nicer language in various ways but stricter when I *do not actually care* about shaving off a few ms and garbage collection is fine, I tried OCaml but the tooling isn't *great* and the libraries seem to be lacking.
gollark: It's among the least bad ones though.
gollark: I NEVER really felt entirely satisfied.
gollark: If there was a programming language which I found satisfying to use, I would be significantly happier with programming.
gollark: I mind MANY programming languages.

References

  1. Albright, S. (2012, March 13). Bugsense: Must Have Tool For Android Developers. at PB Android. Retrieved January 2, 2014.
  2. Sæther, P. O. (n.d.). Live crash reports for your apps using BugSense at Breathing Tech. Retrieved January 2, 2014.
  3. Raan, J. (2013, January 13).Crunchbase.com at Crunchbase. Retrieved January 2, 2014.
  4. N,E. (2012, April 10). Fighting bugs of all kinds. An interview with bugsense and its journey to success. Archived January 6, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 2, 2014.
  5. Angel.co Retrieved January 2, 2014.
  6. (2014, January 5). Appbrain.com Retrieved January 5, 2014
  7. (2013, September 16). Press ReleaseThe Wall Street Journal at Wall Street Journal Retrieved January 2, 2014
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