
ThreadMine.dev
Vercel
Next.js
Netlify
GitHub Pages
Heroku
Render
Railway
Tailwind CSS
ThreadMine analyzes Java/JVM thread dumps in seconds. Upload or paste a dump (no signup, up to 10 MB) and get automatic detection of deadlocks, thread leaks, pool exhaustion, CPU hotspots and virtual thread pinning (Project Loom), plus a health score and a shareable report.
Parses HotSpot, OpenJ9, Zing and GraalVM. Paid plans add an AI assistant that explains the root cause and suggests a fix, multi-dump comparison/timeline, history, integrations and an API. A free, no-login web analyzer is the entry point โ the same low-friction flow as fastThread.io or jstack.review, but with automatic problem detection and AI on top.
Privacy: no account, TLS + AES-256, temporary dumps, zero AI-data retention.
ThreadMine.dev
VercelNo features have been listed yet.
No ThreadMine.dev videos yet. You could help us improve this page by suggesting one.
We have been using Vercel to host some of our internally developed apps that help our team run our operations on Vercel and have found it to be a very developer friendly platform. With our apps built in Next JS it is a natural fit and the dev op pipelines can quickly and easily be configured. As these are internal apps used by our team they don't need to support huge traffic volumes so pricing has been affordable for us.
Based on our record, Vercel seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 651 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Vercel is where JS-heavy Heroku apps land when the shape they really wanted was framework-native serverless, especially anything on Next.js. ISR caching, edge functions, image optimization, middleware, and the AI SDK all wire up automatically from the framework's build output, so the parts of the app Heroku was serving as HTTP handlers become serverless functions that don't pay for idle time. - Source: dev.to / about 18 hours ago
What went wrong: The security commit added a Content-Security-Policy Header with connect-src 'self' https://*.public.blob.vercel-storage.com. The Vercel Blob SDK's client-side upload() makes a PUT to Https://vercel.com/api/blob. That domain wasn't in connect-src. The browser silently blocked the request. - Source: dev.to / 18 days ago
A host: A host is really just a computer that stays powered on and connected to the internet with a public address of its own. When a visitor types in the app's address, their browser sends a request across the internet to that machine, the machine runs the code, and it sends the finished page back. A laptop was quietly doing both jobs during the build, the server and the only visitor allowed in; a host is that... - Source: dev.to / 19 days ago
The short version is this: BabyChain lets you design a ComfyUI-style media chain on a canvas, then call that same chain from product code as POST /api/v1/chains/runs. Every step executes through provider APIs with server-side credentials, every state transition persists to AWS Aurora, and Vercel functions stay stateless. - Source: dev.to / about 1 month ago
My recommendation: if you're bootstrapped and cost matters, start on Cloudflare. If $15-25/month genuinely doesn't affect your runway, start on Vercel for the DX. The break-even is not where the marketing makes it sound โ it's much earlier than you'd guess. - Source: dev.to / about 2 months ago