Redmine has great stabilty aside from framework issues that sometimes com from ruby or rails - but we never lost anything and had not downtime that could be traced back to redmine in the last 7 years. I am still not sure which way to go, but i am personally in doubt that OpenProject will share all the stuff to the open source community - i am just not sure about there "way". Yes, if it comes to the basics, they share the same roots. xDĪfter so many years working with it, do you have any thoughts on how to improve Redmine? Ok, Redmine is an ugly slow moving turtle but hey.Īnd why not make a crazy Ninja Turtle out of it. So I don't see increasing numbers of users in either project. Many people are OK with having a crappy standard workflow/functionality if they don't have and create their own. Nowadays the internet is full of fancy SaaS project management tools with lots of eye candy and innovative work flows. Redmine with all its plugins seemed to me more friendly to extend and customize so I decided to go along with it. If this is the same direction in which you would like to go it can be definitely worth a try. ![]() ![]() There is more pace in the development of OpenProject because they pay developers to write code and have concrete plans in which direction OpenProject should sail. They all share the same gene so in every case you get most of the basic Redmine concepts and modules. ) The same is true for Redmine spins like plan.io though. In my opinion the OpenProject guys have created a quite nice user interface although it can not negate its roots and there are some rough edges, too. I've also reviewed OpenProject a while ago as it looked like the more beautiful brother of Redmine and had problems with convincing my colleagues to try a ticket based project management instead of the "over the air" approach they where used to.
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