Saturday, July 18, 2009

CrashKit in April–July

Sounds like CrashKit is making progress. Bug listings aren't ugly any more, bugs can be closed and ignored, and occurrence counts are actually useful now.

We've had only a few active users these months, and it gave us a well-needed freedom to change things. Now we are finally satisfied enough to let more users in, and will invite everyone waiting on the list during the coming weeks.

CrashKit is the first product we're launching on our own, and man have we learned a lot of things. We learned that it takes a looooong time (and many loooong discussions) to understand how your product should behave and look like, and what your users actually need. And then just as much to settle various small details.

Now that we've covered the basics, new features will be coming soon. CrashKit was born as a solution for desktop applications, and our primary focus for July is to provide more features for web developers. Follow our progress on the public bug tracker of CrashKit.

The blog's been inactive for a while, and this is going to change. Stay tuned for some stories about the development of CrashKit.

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