Great idea but the "free version" is really limiting and renders it rather useless. Imagine if gmail had started with giving 1MB of space .. thats how it feels on this. Sorry to be harsh
@rameshdot0 Thanks for your honest feedback. The free version still has its uses. We keep browsers on the free version up to date, so if you need to do quick testing on the latest browsers, you can just flip through them quickly. Once we grow a little bit more we'll be able to offer something nicer. :)
@rameshdot0 I'm gonna have to agree with Ramesh, Vista + IE9 is practically a defunct scenario since Vista had ridiuclously low acceptance rates and IE9 pretty much only on PCs and Servers that are "protected" or not connected to the internet
How do these compare with BrowserStack? We use BrowserStack at work & it does a pretty good job, intrigued to hear if Browserling differentiates itself in any way.
@fredrivett Thanks for your question. I'm the co-founder of Browserling. Many of the features are the same features but we also offer Live API (browserling.com/api). Live API lets you embed browsers right in your own testing product via a neat JavaScript interface. It's been very popular in QA teams. We're the first company to offer live interactive testing in your browser, we launched in 2010, while our competitors added this feature much later. We're constantly innovating at Browserling. Last year I published this blog post - top 10 innovations at Browserling (www.catonmat.net/blog/top-10-bro...). We also love working fast. Inbox zero and happy customers is how we roll. :)
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