Gomez delivers cross-browser performance monitoring



Email    print   
March 15, 2010 —  Gomez, Compuware’s Web performance division, has announced new features built into its Web experience management platform, including monitoring on multiple commercial browsers and load testing for mobile and Web apps. These upgrades, which Gomez characterized as “industry firsts,” also enable the user to see an application’s behavior “from the outside-in,” meaning they can experience what an end user would see while using the application.

“People can no longer think of their application as a piece of code that runs from behind the firewall,” said Gomez’s CTO Imad Mouline. “It’s what the end user sees.”

Today’s applications are more composite, being assembled with third-party components, and the browser has become the new point of integration, Mouline said. Thus testing and monitoring from the lab are no longer sufficient, he added.

While using Gomez’s solution for load testing Web and mobile applications, developers can accurately predict what the response time will be for the applications under different loads prior to deployment. The new feature works by generating high-volume load from the cloud and testing the applications under peak traffic.

Using what Gomez calls the “last mile,” developers can see how an end user’s experience is impacted based on different load tests. This solution would indicate bottlenecks in the application’s design, or identify if the problem lies in the operational environment or third-party services, reducing time spent troubleshooting. For load and performance testing of mobile applications, Gomez’s new platform supports the Apple iPhone, RIM’s BlackBerry, Symbian and Windows Mobile.

Gomez’s new synthetic Web performance monitoring feature records and executes performance tests using Firefox and Internet Explorer test agents across the Gomez global network and on local PCs. Providing an instant comparison of application performance by browser, this new feature indicates details about overall response times, number of connections and sequences of object downloads. This function enables developers to monitor the application’s overall performance as delivered by Firefox and IE, including each of the browsers’ versions.

Gomez's new Web Cross Browser testing service also enables companies to test website and application performance across more than 500 combinations of browsers (including Chrome, Firefox, IE and Safari), operating systems, screen sizes, and more than 5,000 mobile devices in Gomez's global network. This feature offers developers a view into how their applications look across the spectrum.

“Things work differently from browser to browser,” Mouline said, “and this solution is good for those who develop applications with the end user in mind.” With this option, the developer can see what works and what doesn’t, then fix it before moving on, he said.

All solutions in the platform upgrade are available on a subscription basis and offer a different way to view application performance. “Developers have to understand clearly what the end user will see at the end of the day when the application is ready to go,” Mouline said.




Related Search Term(s): Gomez, mobile development


Share this link: http://sdt.bz/34198
 
Most Read Latest News Blog Resources

Add comment


Name*
Email*  
Country     


  • Comment
Loading




close
NEXT ARTICLE
Kik Launches an Open API to Enable Mobile Developers to Bake Instant Content Sharing Into Any App
API-powered developers like Rude Boy Games, DrinkOwl and FlyScreen can promote their apps to millions of Kik Messenger users Read More...
 
 
 
 
News on Monday
more>>
SharePoint Tech Report
more>>


   

 
 

Download Current Issue
FEBRUARY 2012 PDF ISSUE

Need Back Issues?
DOWNLOAD HERE

Want to subscribe?


 
blogs tab
GitHire: Use Headhunters to Find Your Perfect Programmer
Are you a hiring manager tired of scouring the job boards? Check out this new service that will find 5 people interested in your jobs.
02/03/2012 12:17 PM EST

Facebook claims hacker cred
Facebook's SEC S-1 filing form includes a short essay on the Hacker Way by Mark Zuckerberg himself.
02/02/2012 08:26 AM EST

Ryan Dahl steps down
Ryan Dahl, creator of Node.js, steps back from his position as gatekeeper for the project.
02/01/2012 04:58 PM EST

Bloomberg opens its API
Bloomberg's APIs could lead to a future standard for accessing market data.
02/01/2012 04:41 PM EST

The case for piracy
In the aftermath of SOPA and PIPA, some copyright holders have begun to embrace piracy as inevitable...and even beneficial.
01/30/2012 02:39 PM EST

Tablet sales boom, but applications lag
The installed base of tablet computers and e-book readers is growing rapidly, but no killer app has yet emerged -- hint, hint.
01/28/2012 05:48 PM EST

 
Events calendar tab
2/13/2012 to 2/16/2012
Santa Clara
TechWeb

2/26/2012 to 2/29/2012
San Francisco
BZ Media

2/27/2012 to 3/2/2012
San Francisco
RSA

3/4/2012 to 3/7/2012
Las Vegas
IBM Tivoli

3/5/2012 to 3/9/2012
San Francisco
TechWeb