Jason Kincaid currently works as a writer at TechCrunch. He grew up in Danville, California and later moved to Los Angeles in Los Angeles, California, where he studied biology with a minor in "society and genetics". You can contact him at jkincaidtc@gmail.com (it has other addresses too, so don't worry if you have another). ? Read More
Here is a new start with the support of the Y Combinator to necessarily catch they eye the abundance of Web developers: Proxino, a new service that promises to allow developers to detect errors at all their client-side JavaScript, without the need to manually move their code with errors handling commands.
First, a little high-level background. Unlike languages such as Python, which run on servers that you access the Web site, the JavaScript code is usually performed locally in a Web browser. This allows for quick response and excellent effects, but there are drawbacks: developers are much harder to find out if their sites raise problems for some users. Each browser executes the code differently — and if something goes wrong, the developers will not automatically receive the error message.
There are several ways to do so. Developers can create their own set of tests that automatically check the numerous tests for different browsers. And they also can wrap each of the functions in their code with exception handlers. But Proxino's the founders say test suites are not perfect (the worst mistakes are the ones that slip through those tests), and that many developers do not want to manually add error handling.
That's where Proxino. Developers to allocate them to the JavaScript application through Proxino in the proxy server that automatically migrates each part of the application code that generates the exception reports, so they get pinged every time the user's browser has an error. Proxy server can also reduce the code to reduce download time and caches JavaScript apps to further expedite things. And they will automatically be converted to other languages like CoffeeScript, instrumented, the exception catching, JavaScript.
Of course, the proxy servers have the potential flaw: If the server goes down, your application can go down and you are not in direct control to get it working again. To fix this, Proxino uses a backup method if the Proxino goes down, you just start the service application JavaScript from your own server as you normally would.
Proxino recognizes that there are already some tools out there to optimize JavaScript like Google's closure compiler. But they say that there aren't many tools that do a good job, allowing developers to detect bugs in browsers — and they say their competitors behave inconsistently in different browsers, such as Webkit and Opera.
Draws a Proxino charges based on amount of traffic your Web site. There is a free version for low traffic sites with less than 1000 page views per month; The first level of pay is $ 30/month for up to 10000 page views (you can see the complete price list here).
In the long term, Proxino has some pretty ambitious: they say they want to "serve the Javascript in the world".
Proxino is a proxy service that helps developers get an alert when the JavaScript on the client side, there are exceptions in the browsers of users.
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