A Comedy of Errors -- Or Weis of Rookout
In A Comedy of Errors, we talk to engineers about the weirdest, worst, and most interesting issues they’ve encountered (and resolved) over the years.
Sentry Scouts: DevOps — A Recap
We held our second Sentry Scouts Meetup in February, but never wrote up a recap about our excellent panel discussion on DevOps. We've now addressed this by writing one.
Exception Perceptions: Attack of the Cloned Issues (for Better Understanding User Behavior)
We’re back! That’s right, we have a new episode of Exception Perceptions to share with y’all. This is part 2 of of our Star Wars series, and this time we’re talking all about using errors to better understand user behavior.
4 Ways the New York Times and Sentry Simplify their Tech
James Cunningham, Sentry's Ops Lead, recently spoke to Nick Rockwell, CTO at The New York Times (a Sentry customer), and Yonas Beshawred of Stackshare about simple solutions, React, and going serverless.
Relevance and Ownership of Issues in Sentry 9
With Sentry 9, we've expanded your ability to control who owns what in your Projects, while also expanding the power of teams and individuals to take action with that ownership. How does this work?
Sentry Raises $16 Million Series B from NEA and Accel
We recently raised an additional $16 million in funding from our partners at NEA and Accel. What are we going to do with these additional funds?
Introducing Sentry 9
With Sentry 9, we help you prioritize rapid iteration so you can fix what’s important and stay in your workflow without distraction.
How Sentry Bridges the Gap Between Support and Engineering
Most Sentry users (like you) are software engineers. That's why it's important that support for our platform be provided by other engineers. Learn how we approach this with our Support Engineering team.
Sentry Scouts: Open Source - A Recap
We held our first Sentry Scouts Meetup in January, but never wrote up a recap about our excellent panel discussion. Until now.
How a Windows 10 Update Might Have Broken Your .NET App
Several days ago, Microsoft released the April 2018 Update (1803) of Windows 10. This release was an in-place installation of .NET Framework 4. Surprise! An app you created yesterday, or even years ago, could suddenly start crashing because of an OS update.
Protect Yourself Against Spikes in Events with Spike Protection
There are times you may suddenly see a spike in events that launches you towards your quota much faster than expected. We’d prefer you not have to worry about that, which is why we provide Spike Protection.