Hello there dear reader. Remember me? š Itās been almost 2 years since the last blog post and I can imagine it has felt like JS Bin has been the same for a little while now. Read post
Due to a few recent optimisations in the JS Bin rendering logic, we now have live reloading CSS in the editor. Read post
As the web moves towards using HTTPS everywhere, JS Bin has moved SSL from being a āpro onlyā feature to making it available to everyone as of today. Read post
Weāve just landed a change to the way JS Bin URLs work, and though the new way aims to be intuitive and backward compatible, some of you sharp sighted users might have spotted the change already and wondering what changed and why. Read post
We said weād be working on more pro features, and we are. Also, since weāre open source, this awesome stuff happens from time to time: oEmbed as a community submitted feature. Read post
JS Bin has recently had some subtle changes that help protect you from bugs in your own code. Read post
The last few weeks weāve all been busy on that last stretch of work, that last 5% of work that always eeks itself out to be longer than you expect. Read post
This last week has had a particularly strong focus on security. Some of these changes might also have a direct impact on the way you use JS Bin. Read post
Today we pushed a fairly hefty release containing a few PRs to update libraries, but also a few extra features for all our users. Read post
Weāre doing the final testing on our new processor code. Sass and SCSS have been in high demand for a long time (#176), which has driven this rewrite (#1229). Read post
These past three weeks we have been mainly working on bug fixes and internal maintenance, so no big announcement except that we have released to 100% of our users the settings and preferences pages. Go and have fun with it! Read post
With Giulia back from holiday and Remy easing back into work, the Left Logic offices have been a bit more lively, and pushing a few more bits to production. Read post
Since using JS Bin, Iāve discovered a number of ways to customise it to my liking, and I wanted to share how Iām running in Zen mode! Read post
Whilst Fabien continues with Pro user integration and Giulia goes on holiday, Iāve snuck out of paternity leave and cheekily completed a bit of dev. Read post
This week weāve been doing mostly internal updates to JS Bin, so not much to see. Iāve been working on updating the way in which we create HTML files from bins and weāre going to start experimenting with two-way syncing with Dropbox Read post
This week weāve been dealing with the Heartbleed issue, but more positively have also shipped (for internal, but live testing) updates to user settings and a new pro feature: real-time backup of your bins. Read post
If youāve not heard about Heartbleed, means that potentially all your passwords can be compromised. This isnāt a bug thatās specific to JS Bin, it affects most sign in forms that go over HTTPS. Yes, itās that scary. Read post
Weāve now released Tern to live for everyone, and weāve been hard at work on our Pro features and working on improving the JS Bin core code. Read post
Last week we rolled out SSL support for our sign in (long overdue), and this week weāve had two pretty cool releases: CodeMirror 4 and (in private testing) user settings UI. Read post
Up until now all of JS Bin has been served over standard HTTP. This is fine for most of the site, however weāve decided to upgrade the login and register (and eventually the account settings) pages to use SSL (i.e. encrypted data transmission). Read post
This week we released more experiments, discovered one experiment going wrong (sad face), little two day retreat playing with arduinos and where Iāll be about giving away some sweet JS Bin stickers and maybe even a t-shirt or two. Read post
This is the first installment of āthings we did this weekā. Where weāll share some of the features or changes or fixes weāve been working on. Sometimes it will be small features, sometimes BIG exciting features and other times itāll be progress to much longer term goals. Read post
JS Bin for years has done an absolutely superb job of giving its users an editor and the live output of the HTML, CSS & JavaScript. Something the project has been terrible at is exposing features and new information. Read post