Nice. Thanks. We build Happy Apps (http://www.happyapps.io/) starting with web and DB monitoring, but we're working on expanding into more sophisticated network monitoring.
This is super helpful. Thank you.
Yeah. That's our problem now.
The homepage is not responsive: http://www.happyapps.io/
But the blog that I built separately (using bootstrap) is: http://www.happyapps.io/blog
Now he wants to make the homepage responsive and it's a huge pita.
I use Uptime Robot and have no complaints, but I'm always looking for more and better tools. At first glance there seems to be a big price difference, but I can't say I know enough about the difference between you and them to say if it is worth it. But I would wager that is your top competitor and there is a very sizable price gap.
Examples:
https://uptimerobot.com/pricing - 50 @ 1 min. = $4.50/mo.
http://www.happyapps.io/pricing - 50 @ 1 min. = $49.95/mo.
Again, there might be a great reason for this, but at first glance, I probably would close your tab and look more at theirs when you are talking about that big of a price difference.
There is also a very good chance that I am not your target audience as a smaller dev with only a few clients I monitor. You very well may offer a better service for bigger companies requiring more detailed monitoring, but for my needs, it is a little overpriced. But I really do like your site a lot and wish you well. Just wanted to offer my opinion on it.
Awesome. Thanks. I built a new monitoring tool. We're trying to simplify uptime monitoring for everything. But we're still new, and working on SQL. Would love to know what you think: http://www.happyapps.io/
We built http://www.happyapps.io/ for exactly this reason.
We were working for a company that used both New Relic and Nagios, but we couldn't get either to work effectively, so we built happy apps.
Would love to know what you think.