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StackBlitz Blog

Cloudflare is now backing pkg.pr.new’s data infrastructure! Bolt 100K Open Source Fund ViteConf 2024 was a blast Unbundling the JavaScript ecosystem StackBlitz is joining the Open Source Pledge Announcing TutorialKit: Interactive tutorials in the browser Get ready for ViteConf 2024 Announcing pkg.pr.new StackBlitz welcomes Ari Perkkiö, core team member of Vitest Catch us at Figma Config WebContainers and the future of web dev (interview with Jòan Varvenne) Open Source at StackBlitz Avoiding CORS issues with this one simple trick How to document design system components What is Vite (and why is it so popular)? Improving the developer experience of enterprise design systems Flow state: Why fragmented thinking is worse than any interruption What is Storybook? An Overview for Developers The Self-Rendering Eval Shirt Starters Upgrade: WebContainers and Vite Putting the Dev in Figma’s Dev Mode Announcing StackBlitz Self-hosted Building Together in Illinois 5 lessons design systems teams can learn from open-source maintainers Announcing Native Language Support in WebContainers ViteConf is back! Bringing Sharp to WebAssembly and WebContainers npm, yarn and pnpm are now supported natively in WebContainers The Atomic Waltz: Unraveling WebAssembly Issues in V8 and SpiderMonkey WebContainers now run on Safari, iOS, and iPadOS Now I am become the Destroyer of Threads WebContainer API is here. StackBlitz September 2022 Update StackBlitz August 2022 Update StackBlitz July 2022 Update Introducing: Collections and Social Previews! Down the caching-hole: adventures in Announcing ViteConf StackBlitz June 2022 Update The Fox and the Bolt: Bringing WebContainers to Firefox WebContainers are now supported in Firefox on desktop and Android StackBlitz May 2022 Update StackBlitz April 2022 Update Cloudflare and StackBlitz partner to bring Cloudflare Workers to your browser Powering over 2M developers a month, StackBlitz has raised $7.9M StackBlitz March 2022 Update Announcement: WebContainers are out of beta in Chromium StackBlitz has joined the Bytecode Alliance StackBlitz February 2022 Update Bringing WebContainers to all Browsers: a call to action for COEP Credentialless Cross-Browser support with Cross-Origin isolation StackBlitz welcomes Patak, core maintainer of Vite Chasing Memory Bugs through V8 and WebAssembly Remix v1 has landed, and it runs on WebContainers SvelteKit is now fully supported in WebContainers We Shopify partners with StackBlitz to bring Hydrogen development in-browser StackBlitz September 2021 Update Introducing Vite.new Templates! Announcing WebContainers Astro support! 🛰 Introducing: SQLite3 support in WebContainers! 🧪 StackBlitz July 2021 Update StackBlitz June 2021 Update Introducing WebContainers: Run Node.js natively in your browser Interactive Docs: The new norm for Remote Work
Introducing StackBlitz Teams
Corey Sayers VP of Experience at Acorn Finance · 2023-10-05 · via StackBlitz Blog

We’re stoked to unveil the newest way to build the web with the web: StackBlitz Teams.

Every month, over 2 million developers use StackBlitz to learn new frameworks, reproduce bugs, and build prototypes of new features and tools.

Today, most StackBlitz projects are public and accessible to everyone. This has made StackBlitz a natural fit for open source projects, public documentation, and educational resources that are built to be shared. By contrast, private projects have been supported in StackBlitz for some time but are limited to one individual user.

With StackBlitz Teams, you can now collaborate with your teammates in a secure, private workspace with the same fine-grained access controls you have come to expect from tools like GitHub and Google Docs.

StackBlitz Teams has allowed our team to focus on designing and building features by eliminating the collaborative friction of local development environments. Having everything in StackBlitz also made code reviews significantly faster—we click the Review PR button in GitHub and jump right into the code with the in-browser staging server ready to go.

Fully integrated with your GitHub Organizations

Getting started with StackBlitz Teams is as easy as connecting to your existing GitHub organization. Every member of your organization can access your new Teams workspace in StackBlitz.

From there, you can collaborate on public GitHub repositories, create shared projects, and organize them into shared collections.

StackBlitz Teams is currently available for GitHub organizations and we will be adding support for other providers soon. Is there a provider you want to see? Let us know.

Teams can also open, edit, and share private projects and GitHub repositories by upgrading users to the paid tier. Any repositories you have permission to access within GitHub will also be accessible to you within StackBlitz.

StackBlitz Teams, the collaborative code playground, has been a game-changer for our internal DX. We now have a seamless GitHub integration and a production-grade IDE that works - no more annoying remote VM sandbox crash errors. Love it!

Chris Spilka Co-founder & CEO at Handsontable

Use your own components and packages from your npm registry

With our release of StackBlitz Teams, we’re excited to add integrations to private package managers, allowing your team to make use of private, shared assets within StackBlitz. Connect your Team to private npm registries, Jfrog Artifactory, or Sonatype Nexus to use your internal libraries in StackBlitz.

Get started with Teams

We’re offering a 14-day free trial of Teams, including access to all paid features. Your account will automatically revert to our free tier at the end of your trial. If you choose to upgrade to a paid plan, you and your teammates will get a free StackBlitz t-shirt.

A more powerful free tier

As we build new ways for teams and enterprises to use StackBlitz, we also want to make StackBlitz’s free version even more capable.

Environment secrets

Additionally, all StackBlitz users can now add environment variables to their workspace, allowing you to securely connect to external services. For now, environment variables are defined for a single user account and are can only be referenced in our newest editor.

Coming soon

A reimagined editor

We announced the beta of our next-generation editor at ViteConf last year. Compared to StackBlitz’s classic editor, our Codeflow IDE is a fully-featured, VS Code-like editor complete with a in-browser Node.js environment, terminal, and support for package management and extensions.

StackBlitz's next-generation editor based on VS Code

We’re looking forward to releasing this new editor out of beta into general availability later this year. In the meantime, the beta release of our new editor is free for all users.

Additional options for on-prem deployments

We will also make the capabilities in Teams and Codeflow available for enterprises running StackBlitz on-premises. Our updated enterprise server is slated for release later this year. If you’re interested in StackBlitz Enterprise, get in touch.

Try Teams for yourself

Create your first StackBlitz Team today! To get started, you need a free Github organization (you can create one here if you don’t have one). Then, start your 14-day trial of StackBlitz Teams on our pricing page.

Eric Simons

CEO at StackBlitz making web development fast & secure. Viva la Web!