Domain: trello.com
Stories and comments across the archive that link to trello.com.
Comments · 12
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When they fix the bugs, not before
These are lists of bugs in just gnome-shell. The reading is terrifying for people who actually want to work with Ubuntu. Some were known before releasing 18.04 "LTS", are still not fixed, and force me to avoid using full-screen video and to reboot my Ubuntu VM very regularly. Luckily I don't depend on Ubuntu for work, it's just a VM...
https://trello.com/c/pe5mRmx7
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubu... -
Re: I use Chrome for Discord and that's it
References: Twitter, Twitter, Trello, Reddit, Discord Feedback
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Re:Font fetish
Pick your poison
:)
https://www.droptask.com/featu...
http://www.trello.com/
http://www.thoughtbox.es/
http://www.weekplan.net/
http://www.teamweek.com/There was a gamey app called Toround or something, Nine for photo-based tasks, etc.
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Re:Trello
Does not fulfill all of your requirements, but it is simple, and has web and mobile apps: https://trello.com/
I'm not sure why you've been modded up, even taking into account that "all your requirements" caveat you tossed in. TFS has only five sentences, the second of which says "For a variety of reasons, I need something I host myself...". That seems like a pretty immutable part of the spec, and Trello doesn't satisfy it.
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Trello
Does not fulfill all of your requirements, but it is simple, and has web and mobile apps:
https://trello.com/Made by https://www.joelonsoftware.com... , who has a style that most, but not all, developers like.
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Re:Yawn.
Funny...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
The Communist Control Act (68 Stat. 775, 50 U.S.C. 841-844) is a piece of United States federal legislation, signed into law by President Dwight Eisenhower on 24 August 1954, which outlaws the Communist Party of the United States and criminalizes membership in, or support for the Party or "Communist-action" organizations and defines evidence to be considered by a jury in determining participation in the activities, planning, actions, objectives, or purposes of such organizations.
You might also be amused/informed/scared shitless by this:
https://trello.com/c/arrNVNIt/...Oh, an amusing note on the Wikipedia page:
The overwhelming support provided by the liberals has attracted much attention from historians such as Mary McAuliffe (The Journal of American History).
This is worth reading:
https://law.resource.org/pub/u...It's important to note, and this is from Wikipedia, that this is also true:
Despite that, no administration has tried to enforce it.
Further reading and research can be done here:
https://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/gran... (Loading poorly.)
http://tucnak.fsv.cuni.cz/~cal... (Loads of good information.)In other words, you're actually wrong. Now, the odds of it being prosecuted are nil and the US Communist Party exists to this day. But, it is very, very much a FEDERAL CRIME to be a Communist or a member of the Communist Party in the United States. The Nazi party is fair game, however. You can be a Nazi, if you want, but being a communist is right out.
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Trello
Check out Trello (https://trello.com). Not FLOSS, but a free cloud-based note-taking, project managing, checklist-managing, attachment storage, team-usable swiss army knife. No clue how this thing is still free (shhhh). I use it for just about everything you mentioned. It supports taking notes (called "cards") in Markdown format, sharing individual notes or entire "boards" with others, organizing and labeling notes, and attaching files. About the only thing it's missing is a drawing/sketching tool and better notification alarm options. If I need to refer to something scanned, written, or otherwise graphics, you can attach unlimited files to each card or paste links in your notes. The mobile apps are identical to the web-app version, so you can take it with you to meetings on a tablet/laptop, and then come back to a workstation and see all of the updates on the web version.
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Atlassian Wiki and Jira
If you can afford it, Jira and WIki from Atlassian (Confluence) are the best out there. If not, i would go with Redmine or Trello. You should also give asana a try. Here's a list that will guide you through what's out there: Freedcamp - Free - https://freedcamp.com/ - Online, doesn't log time directly on the task Velocity - Free and Paid - http://velocity.pm/ (Online) Time Tracking Brigthpod - Free (2 Projects) Paid - http://www.brightpod.com/ - Specify tasks, log work Asana - Free and Paid - https://asana.com/ (Online) - Doesn't log work Moovia - Free (2 members) and Paid - https://site.moovia.com/ (Online) Time tracking, Does not specify tasks Producteev - Free and Paid - https://www.producteev.com/ - Online, Does not specify tasks, doesn't log work Stepsie - Free - http://www.stepsie.com/ - Online, Does not specify tasks, doesn't log work Trello - Free - https://trello.com/ **** SELF HOST Redmine - Free - http://www.redmine.org/ Projects, wiki, issues Chili Project - Fork of Redmine Basecamp - close source - user friendly Open atrium (drupal) - not good issue tracking Collabtive - http://collabtive.o-dyn.de/ Kforge - https://pypi.python.org/pypi/k... ClockingIT - http://wiki.clockingit.com/ Assembla (SaaS Agile) Harvest (SaaS User Friendly) FreshBooks (SaaS) - Not open source - Time tracking invoicing Project Pier - Free - http://www.projectpier.org/ Trac - Free - http://trac.edgewall.org/ 2 plan - Free - http://2-plan.com/ MyCollab - Free - http://community.mycollab.com/... (Self hosted) Manage Yor Team - http://www.manageyourteam.net/ (Self hostes) Kanboard - Free - http://kanboard.net/ (light and self hosted) ProjecQtor - Free - http://www.projeqtor.org/ Task Coach - Free - http://taskcoach.org/ Task Juggler - Free - http://www.taskjuggler.org/ DotProject - Free - http://www.dotproject.net/ Project.net - Free - http://sourceforge.net/project... GanttProject (like MS Project) - Free - http://www.ganttproject.biz/ OpenWorkBench - Free - http://sourceforge.net/project... Codendi - Paid - http://www.codendi.com/ Egroupware 2014 - Paid - http://www.egroupware.org/star... - Atlassian Confluence and Jira - Trial and Paid Britix24 - Trial and Paid - http://www.bitrix24.com/ ProofHub - Trial and Paid - https://www.proofhub.com/ iCoordinator - Paid - http://www.icoordinator.com/en... FengOffice (like MS Project) - Trial and Paid - http://www.fengoffice.com/web/ Bugzilla - Bug tracking Mantis - Bug tracking *** Task Management Task Freak! - http://www.taskfreak.com/
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Trello
I have used Trello for the coordination of issues for a large-ish project with coders, project managers, and general business people, it works well, very drag-and-drop-y, nice card metaphor.
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trello
As a good example, you should take a look at trello , which is basically an organization/design/progress list tool, where each atomic activity is represented by a card. I've been using it extensively for about a year now, and the card+board metaphor really seems to make intuitive sense to everyone I've introduced to it.
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Reports
I'm seeing lots of comments telling people to (dont) do daily reports, or similar tasks.
What my team has started doing is using the Trello web site for project management. Each task is added as a card, and then assigned people to work on it. Any notes are then added to the cards. This is by far the quickest system I've ever seen for day-to-day documentation. There is no more spread sheets or paragraphs of text to sort through. The cards themselves represent a summary of events, with more details after opening the cards.
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Trello
https://trello.com/
Its interface is great for tracking all manner of tasks. Totally customizable. Works on Android phones, probably iPhones too, or any modern browser so you can manage your notes from whatever connected device is convenient. Free.