This episode currently has no reviews.
Submit ReviewRelying on customers to report errors is not good. It's rude to customers and bad for business.
Ideally, this would be solved easily with tests. Why not just cover every scenario with a test? Then life would be perfect and fine and great. Because here in reality, humans are pretty bad at writing tests. Not just because we’re all kinda lazy and maybe a little dumb, but also because we can’t anticipate every single way users are going to interact with our product. They might do something really, really, really stupid (or something really, really, really smart) that we didn’t think about.
That’s why Sentry tells you about errors in your code before your customers have a chance to encounter them.
Not only do we tell you about them, we also give you all the details you’ll need to be able to fix them. You’ll see exactly how many users have been impacted by a bug, the stack trace, the commit that the error was released as part of, the engineer who wrote the line of code that is currently busted, and a lot more.
Your code is broken. Let’s fix it together. Sentry.io.
@ryanmcdonough - It’d be awesome if you had any decisions product wise you had to make recently and how you came to your final choice, e.g how to structure products, elasticsearch compared to other options. Always interested to hear peoples decision processes.
Last but not least, if you haven't rated or reviewed the show yet and you'd like to do us a huge favor, you can do so by clicking here!
If you're looking for a link we've mentioned in the past, head on over to the Does Not Compute site! We've even included a search tool for you to use to find episodes that touch on specific topics.
If you have enjoyed the show so far, reach out to us on twitter at @seanwashbot and @Schrockwell, or join us in the Spectrum community at https://spectrum.chat/specfm/does-not-compute!
Relying on customers to report errors is not good. It's rude to customers and bad for business.
Ideally, this would be solved easily with tests. Why not just cover every scenario with a test? Then life would be perfect and fine and great. Because here in reality, humans are pretty bad at writing tests. Not just because we’re all kinda lazy and maybe a little dumb, but also because we can’t anticipate every single way users are going to interact with our product. They might do something really, really, really stupid (or something really, really, really smart) that we didn’t think about.
That’s why Sentry tells you about errors in your code before your customers have a chance to encounter them.
Not only do we tell you about them, we also give you all the details you’ll need to be able to fix them. You’ll see exactly how many users have been impacted by a bug, the stack trace, the commit that the error was released as part of, the engineer who wrote the line of code that is currently busted, and a lot more.
Your code is broken. Let’s fix it together. Sentry.io.
@ryanmcdonough - It’d be awesome if you had any decisions product wise you had to make recently and how you came to your final choice, e.g how to structure products, elasticsearch compared to other options. Always interested to hear peoples decision processes.
Last but not least, if you haven't rated or reviewed the show yet and you'd like to do us a huge favor, you can do so by clicking here!
If you're looking for a link we've mentioned in the past, head on over to the Does Not Compute site! We've even included a search tool for you to use to find episodes that touch on specific topics.
If you have enjoyed the show so far, reach out to us on twitter at @seanwashbot and @Schrockwell, or join us in the Spectrum community at https://spectrum.chat/specfm/does-not-compute!
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