How Pinterest Leverages Honeycomb to Enhance CI Observability and Improve CI Build Stability
Pinterest uses Honeycomb to keep their CI clear, stable, and easy to watch.
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Pinterest uses Honeycomb to keep their CI clear, stable, and easy to watch.
Walmart traces CI/CD performance to keep their pipeline reliable.
Uber rolled up their sleeves to tackle the hefty size of their iOS app and slim it down.
Pinterest revamped their CI system, splitting tasks and streamlining to cut build times by over half.
Dropbox cut Android startup time by 30% with some clever tweaks.
Microsoft tracks Android app size in CI to catch bloat early on.
Microsoft manages app size as they upgrade React Native features.
Spotify looks back at building a lightweight app that still rocks, one year after launch.
Dropbox overhauled their Android testing setup for smoother, faster runs.
Huawei’s Leak Canary sniffs out Android memory leaks like a pro.
Expedia tracks iOS app performance to keep travelers happy on the go.
Farfetch fine-tunes their app startup with deeper optimizations.
Netflix syncs Android and iOS logic with Kotlin Multiplatform for reliability.
Uber keeps all their iOS code in one giant repo, helping teams sync up and scale without chaos.
Dropbox found a weird but genius fix for an Android path problem.
Pinterest started testing UI before code gets merged, catching bugs early to keep things steady.
Farfetch begins boosting their mobile app’s launch speed smartly.
Microsoft uses LazyLifecycle to speed up Android screen launches.
Uber tapped the QUIC protocol to cut latency and make their app feel snappier.
Square speeds up Caviar’s mobile web app for happier users.