FWIW I actually like Jira (much more than Trac) and find it a lot easier to 
use. I think the trick is configuring very basic workflows so users don't 
have to fight through transitions. Open, Closed, Assigned/In Progress and 
transitions to and from each state would get us really close to the current 
Trac workflow. My number 1 gripe with Trac is that search SUCKS, so I'd 
actually be in favour of a migration *if someone else were to do all the 
work* :D. But that's the rub isn't it, nothing comes for free. We'd also 
lose login with Github (I think) and psuedo-anonymous triage because Jira 
requires an email account, so there's no way it could be a full parity 
transition.

Taiga looks very nice, but arguments made above also apply. There's a cost 
in setup + migration, overhead of learning a new system, and a lack of 
knowledge about the problems that will evidently exist.

I really do think Trac is awful though, just wanted to be clear about that.

On Thursday, 7 January 2016 03:34:13 UTC+11, Victor Sosa wrote:
>
>
> Looks like it is a NO to the proposition.
>
> Daniele
>
> I like what I saw in taiga, that's a way better bug tracking UI; you can 
> check here:
>
> https://tree.taiga.io/project/taiga/issues?page=1
>
> On Wednesday, January 6, 2016 at 12:18:13 PM UTC-4, Daniele Procida wrote:
>>
>> On Wed, Jan 6, 2016, Daniele Procida <dan...@vurt.org> wrote: 
>>
>> >By all means it's useful to get votes on something like this, even 
>> >before we consider those questions, because if enough people want 
>> >something it's always possible - but be aware that simply getting lots 
>> >of votes for it would only ever be the first and easiest step. 
>>
>> While we're in the realm of the completely hypothetical, if I were going 
>> to find myself enthusiastic about moving to a new development tracking 
>> platform, it would be Taiga. <https://taiga.io> 
>>
>> It's written in Django, by a company that actively supports the Django 
>> community. It's open-source.  The people who develop it are approachable 
>> and friendly. It has a nice name. 
>>
>> Daniele 
>>
>>

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