Capture bugs instantly with a screenshot, console logs, network requests, and device info in one click.
Each app below addresses a specific gap in Jam's offering. We picked them based on real user review patterns and feature differentiation.
BirdEatsBug captures screenshots, console output, and network logs in one report, designed to eliminate engineer follow-up questions.
Explore BirdEatsBug data →Marker.io lets testers annotate screenshots and capture technical metadata, sending reports directly to project management tools.
Explore Marker.io data →Loom lets testers record a short video demonstrating the bug, providing visual context without technical metadata.
Explore Loom data →Userback allows annotated screenshot reporting with session replay, integrating with Jira, Trello, and other tools.
Explore Userback data →Sentry automatically captures errors with full stack traces and context, proactively alerting engineers before users report bugs.
Explore Sentry data →Instabug embeds a bug reporting SDK in mobile apps, letting users shake to report bugs with screenshots, logs, and steps to reproduce.
Explore Instabug data →Jam gained rapid adoption among product and QA teams tired of engineers asking for more information after every bug report.
Jam captures a screenshot, browser console logs, network request logs, browser and OS version, screen resolution, and the URL — all in a single click.
Jam integrates with Jira, Linear, GitHub Issues, GitLab, Asana, ClickUp, and Slack, among others.
Sentry monitors your app automatically and captures errors without user action. Jam is triggered manually by testers or users who want to report something specific, adding a human-initiated layer on top.
App Vulture analyzes App Store ratings, review sentiment, and update frequency to identify bug reporting tools that are actively maintained and valued by product teams.
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