Adobe BrowserLab
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Adobe BrowserLab was a service that enabled cross-browser testing by producing screenshots of websites from various web browsers across different platforms (Windows and OS X are currently supported). Screenshots could be compared side-by-side or overlaid upon one another, with diagnostic tools to help discover cross-browser differences.
| Adobe BrowserLab | |
|---|---|
| Developer | Adobe Systems |
| Stable release | 1.0.0
|
| Operating system | Mac OS X and Windows |
| Website | browserlab |
The service could access dynamic pages across the web, or local content via Firebug or Adobe Dreamweaver CS5. The BrowserLab for Firebug extension allowed Firebug users to preview their page (live URL, or local edited source) in BrowserLab. With this procedure, it is possible to use BrowserLab with website material that has not yet been made available online or is protected by a firewall.
History
In 2006, a team of Chicago-based designers and developers, Dean Vukas, Josh Hatwich, Ted Billups and Charles Stevenson conceived and invented MeerMeer, a web site testing tool for web developers and designers. The MeerMeer SaaS application and patent was sold to Adobe Systems, Inc. in December 2007[citation needed].
BrowserLab was released worldwide in Free Preview June 2009.[1]
On March 13, 2013, BrowserLab was shut down.[2]
See also
External links
- Adobe BrowserLab official site