RE: Best subversion repository

2010-02-25 Thread Andrew Scott

Have you looked into google code at all Michael?


-Original Message-
From: Michael Dinowitz [mailto:mdino...@houseoffusion.com] 
Sent: Thursday, 25 February 2010 5:40 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Best subversion repository


I'm looking at offsite subversion repositories and I'd like to hear
the pros and cons from people who may have used them. The question is
more towards tools and usage than anything else. This is what I have:

Assembla - no real free account, needs the $49 account to be
effective, what are the tools like?
Beanstalk - free account, lowest cost ($15) is effective for use, not many
tools
unfuddle - free account, lowest cost ($9) is effective for use, though
it'll fill up fast, looks like a good spread of tools
codespaces - no free account, lowest cost ($2.99) is effective for
use, looks like it has a LOT of tools
xp-dev - free account (with ads), lowest cost ($5) is effective for
use, looks like a lot of tools

The free xp-dev or unfuddle both look like something that anyone
should get into using. The minimum codespaces looks better than either
of the free options. The minimum xp-dev has so much unlimited (users,
projects, etc.) that it kind of blows the others away. So which is
best? Which has the best tools (in your opinion). Step up to the plate
and let us all know.

Thanks

--
Michael Dinowitz



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RE: Best subversion repository

2010-02-25 Thread Andrew Scott

Michael,

It is going to depend on what you are looking to improve, but value for
money (free) you can't go past these combinations using
Eclipse/CFEclsipe/ColdFusion Builder, Subversive and Myln. The reason that
these two tools go hand in hand is two things. The first is Mylyn can
remember what tasks you are working on, which can connect to Jira, Bug
Tracker and a number of other bug trackers. When I say track you switch
tasks, and it remembers every file that you have worked on for that task.
This is great if you switch between tasks a lot in a day and/or have to
revisit a task some months down the track.

Secondly Subversive others will recommend Subclipse but I have used both and
prefer the former, anyway when using this ticket you need to get whoever
hosts you Subversion (we host it ourselves) to add the subversion plugin.
When that is installed and you have Mylyn tracking a ticket, you can right
mouse on the files you have modified and the ticket number is already added
with some default information. You can modify this, but the point is that
when you commit your files to SVN with the Jira ticket. Any time you log
into Jira, you can see a new tab called subversion commits and you can see a
history of when the files had changed for that ticket.

Also Mylyn allows for you to view the Jira information in the IDE as well,
and I am sure the other bug tracker connectors will do the same. Just that I
am born and breed subversion.

Anyway, this pretty much covers the tools that makes me a more productive
developer. Without them I would be wasting a lot more time than the anything
else.

Also you might want to check this link out, in the top right there is a
webinar button watch this as it will give you a better idea on how these all
work.

http://live.eclipse.org/node/676

HTH
Andrew Scott




-Original Message-
From: Michael Dinowitz [mailto:mdino...@houseoffusion.com] 
Sent: Thursday, 25 February 2010 8:49 AM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Best subversion repository


The question is not about using subversion, which most would say is a
requirement for professional development. The question is about which
of the external repositories are the best to use. Which has the best
features. Some of the people replying have said that they only use one
of these resources for subversion and have not used the other
features. It's possible that people doing so don't even know what
other features exist.

I want to know what you know about them. I want to know what'll make
me a more productive developer. Feed me your knowledge. :)

--
Michael Dinowitz



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Re: Best subversion repository

2010-02-25 Thread Gerald Guido

Thanx for the heads up on the Unfuddle Mylyn connector. Very nice.


G!

On Wed, Feb 24, 2010 at 3:25 PM, LRS Scout lrssc...@gmail.com wrote:


 +1 using unfuddle

 They have a pimp mylyn based plug-in for eclipse too.

 -Original Message-
 From: Gerald Guido [mailto:gerald.gu...@gmail.com]
 Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 3:17 PM
 To: cf-talk
 Subject: Re: Best subversion repository


 I use Unfuddle and I like it a lot. Most of my projects fit within the 200
 meg limit for free accounts. You are right, it does fill up fast especially
 if you are working with large(ish) documents like things like MS Office
 docs, PSD's and Illustrator files.

 IIRC the last time you asked about this you said that you were msotly
 versioning stuff like Word docs and such. If that is the case you may wish
 to consider services like Box.net that offer butt loads of storage as well
 as document versioning on the cheap.  Box.net's has versioning with it's
 business plan w/15 gigs for $15/mo.  and a 2 gig file size limit.

 Just throwing it out there.

 G!


 On Wed, Feb 24, 2010 at 1:40 PM, Michael Dinowitz 
 mdino...@houseoffusion.com wrote:

 
  I'm looking at offsite subversion repositories and I'd like to hear
  the pros and cons from people who may have used them. The question is
  more towards tools and usage than anything else. This is what I have:
 
  Assembla - no real free account, needs the $49 account to be
  effective, what are the tools like?
  Beanstalk - free account, lowest cost ($15) is effective for use, not
 many
  tools
  unfuddle - free account, lowest cost ($9) is effective for use, though
  it'll fill up fast, looks like a good spread of tools
  codespaces - no free account, lowest cost ($2.99) is effective for
  use, looks like it has a LOT of tools
  xp-dev - free account (with ads), lowest cost ($5) is effective for
  use, looks like a lot of tools
 
  The free xp-dev or unfuddle both look like something that anyone
  should get into using. The minimum codespaces looks better than either
  of the free options. The minimum xp-dev has so much unlimited (users,
  projects, etc.) that it kind of blows the others away. So which is
  best? Which has the best tools (in your opinion). Step up to the plate
  and let us all know.
 
  Thanks
 
  --
  Michael Dinowitz
 
 



 

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Re: Best subversion repository

2010-02-25 Thread Maureen

Ditto.  I've used them for a number of different projects, and they
are excellent.

On Wed, Feb 24, 2010 at 10:53 AM, Nick Gleason n.glea...@citysoft.com wrote:

 Hi Michael,

 We user Codesign (formerly CVS dude).  There are several different pricing
 levels but they are all pretty affordable.  We've had a very good experience
 with them.  When there was a small billing mix up a while back, the CEO
 himself got involved and straightened it out.  I was impressed with that
 level of service.  I know that they include a bunch of other developer tools
 as well, but we have only used SVN with them.



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Re: Best subversion repository

2010-02-25 Thread Greg Luce

Unfuddle is very slick. The free account is perfect for little adhoc
projects and the corresponding bug tracker and mylyn connector work nicely.

Greg



On Thu, Feb 25, 2010 at 4:48 PM, Maureen mamamaur...@gmail.com wrote:


 Ditto.  I've used them for a number of different projects, and they
 are excellent.

 On Wed, Feb 24, 2010 at 10:53 AM, Nick Gleason n.glea...@citysoft.com
 wrote:
 
  Hi Michael,
 
  We user Codesign (formerly CVS dude).  There are several different
 pricing
  levels but they are all pretty affordable.  We've had a very good
 experience
  with them.  When there was a small billing mix up a while back, the CEO
  himself got involved and straightened it out.  I was impressed with that
  level of service.  I know that they include a bunch of other developer
 tools
  as well, but we have only used SVN with them.
 
 

 

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Re: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread Matt Quackenbush

I can only speak of Assembla, since I use them.  I am *extremely* pleased
with their tools and service.

HTH


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RE: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread Nick Gleason

Hi Michael,

We user Codesign (formerly CVS dude).  There are several different pricing
levels but they are all pretty affordable.  We've had a very good experience
with them.  When there was a small billing mix up a while back, the CEO
himself got involved and straightened it out.  I was impressed with that
level of service.  I know that they include a bunch of other developer tools
as well, but we have only used SVN with them.

Nick


..
 
CitySoft, Inc. | http://www.citysoft.com
 
Phone: (866) 751-1992 | Cell: (617) 899-5395 | Fax: (617) 507-0444
 
Spend Less  Do More - Community Enterprise combines great features 
with an affordable price.


..

 -Original Message-
 From: Michael Dinowitz [mailto:mdino...@houseoffusion.com]
 Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 10:40 AM
 To: cf-talk
 Subject: Best subversion repository
 
 
 I'm looking at offsite subversion repositories and I'd like to hear
 the pros and cons from people who may have used them. The question is
 more towards tools and usage than anything else. This is what I have:
 
 Assembla - no real free account, needs the $49 account to be
 effective, what are the tools like?
 Beanstalk - free account, lowest cost ($15) is effective for use, not
 many tools
 unfuddle - free account, lowest cost ($9) is effective for use, though
 it'll fill up fast, looks like a good spread of tools
 codespaces - no free account, lowest cost ($2.99) is effective for
 use, looks like it has a LOT of tools
 xp-dev - free account (with ads), lowest cost ($5) is effective for
 use, looks like a lot of tools
 
 The free xp-dev or unfuddle both look like something that anyone
 should get into using. The minimum codespaces looks better than either
 of the free options. The minimum xp-dev has so much unlimited (users,
 projects, etc.) that it kind of blows the others away. So which is
 best? Which has the best tools (in your opinion). Step up to the plate
 and let us all know.
 
 Thanks
 
 --
 Michael Dinowitz
 
 

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Re: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread Michael Dinowitz

To update the list, codesion has no free account, lowest cost ($6.99)
is effective for use and it looks like it has a range of tools. They
seem more fine grained on features including a limit on bandwidth.

--
Michael Dinowitz




On Wed, Feb 24, 2010 at 1:40 PM, Michael Dinowitz
mdino...@houseoffusion.com wrote:
 I'm looking at offsite subversion repositories and I'd like to hear
 the pros and cons from people who may have used them. The question is
 more towards tools and usage than anything else. This is what I have:

 Assembla - no real free account, needs the $49 account to be
 effective, what are the tools like?
 Beanstalk - free account, lowest cost ($15) is effective for use, not many 
 tools
 unfuddle - free account, lowest cost ($9) is effective for use, though
 it'll fill up fast, looks like a good spread of tools
 codespaces - no free account, lowest cost ($2.99) is effective for
 use, looks like it has a LOT of tools
 xp-dev - free account (with ads), lowest cost ($5) is effective for
 use, looks like a lot of tools

 The free xp-dev or unfuddle both look like something that anyone
 should get into using. The minimum codespaces looks better than either
 of the free options. The minimum xp-dev has so much unlimited (users,
 projects, etc.) that it kind of blows the others away. So which is
 best? Which has the best tools (in your opinion). Step up to the plate
 and let us all know.

 Thanks

 --
 Michael Dinowitz


~|
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RE: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread Rick Faircloth

Assembla's been great for me, too...but I only use the repository as a code
back-up,
since I'm a solo developer.  I'm going to check out the less-expensive
options, however.

Rick

-Original Message-
From: Matt Quackenbush [mailto:quackfu...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 1:48 PM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Best subversion repository


I can only speak of Assembla, since I use them.  I am *extremely* pleased
with their tools and service.

HTH




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Re: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread Tony Bentley

Big fan of unfuddle due to the mylyn task repository plugin for eclipse and the 
simple integration to the svn repository in eclipse. If you are still using 
dreamweaver, you should make the switch because the repository plugin is only 
compatible with one version of svn. This means if you are doing commits from 
different versions of svn clients, it will kill the DW synchronization.


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RE: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread Andy Matthews

Are you not considering using Subversion? We've been using it here at
Dealerskins for over 2 years and have been very pleased. We run our own
repositories out of our staging server. So as far as cost goes it's free, if
you have the machine already. 

-Original Message-
From: Michael Dinowitz [mailto:mdino...@houseoffusion.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 12:40 PM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Best subversion repository


I'm looking at offsite subversion repositories and I'd like to hear the pros
and cons from people who may have used them. The question is more towards
tools and usage than anything else. This is what I have:

Assembla - no real free account, needs the $49 account to be effective, what
are the tools like?
Beanstalk - free account, lowest cost ($15) is effective for use, not many
tools unfuddle - free account, lowest cost ($9) is effective for use, though
it'll fill up fast, looks like a good spread of tools codespaces - no free
account, lowest cost ($2.99) is effective for use, looks like it has a LOT
of tools xp-dev - free account (with ads), lowest cost ($5) is effective for
use, looks like a lot of tools

The free xp-dev or unfuddle both look like something that anyone should get
into using. The minimum codespaces looks better than either of the free
options. The minimum xp-dev has so much unlimited (users, projects, etc.)
that it kind of blows the others away. So which is best? Which has the best
tools (in your opinion). Step up to the plate and let us all know.

Thanks

--
Michael Dinowitz



~|
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Re: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread Gerald Guido

I use Unfuddle and I like it a lot. Most of my projects fit within the 200
meg limit for free accounts. You are right, it does fill up fast especially
if you are working with large(ish) documents like things like MS Office
docs, PSD's and Illustrator files.

IIRC the last time you asked about this you said that you were msotly
versioning stuff like Word docs and such. If that is the case you may wish
to consider services like Box.net that offer butt loads of storage as well
as document versioning on the cheap.  Box.net's has versioning with it's
business plan w/15 gigs for $15/mo.  and a 2 gig file size limit.

Just throwing it out there.

G!


On Wed, Feb 24, 2010 at 1:40 PM, Michael Dinowitz 
mdino...@houseoffusion.com wrote:


 I'm looking at offsite subversion repositories and I'd like to hear
 the pros and cons from people who may have used them. The question is
 more towards tools and usage than anything else. This is what I have:

 Assembla - no real free account, needs the $49 account to be
 effective, what are the tools like?
 Beanstalk - free account, lowest cost ($15) is effective for use, not many
 tools
 unfuddle - free account, lowest cost ($9) is effective for use, though
 it'll fill up fast, looks like a good spread of tools
 codespaces - no free account, lowest cost ($2.99) is effective for
 use, looks like it has a LOT of tools
 xp-dev - free account (with ads), lowest cost ($5) is effective for
 use, looks like a lot of tools

 The free xp-dev or unfuddle both look like something that anyone
 should get into using. The minimum codespaces looks better than either
 of the free options. The minimum xp-dev has so much unlimited (users,
 projects, etc.) that it kind of blows the others away. So which is
 best? Which has the best tools (in your opinion). Step up to the plate
 and let us all know.

 Thanks

 --
 Michael Dinowitz

 

~|
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RE: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread LRS Scout

+1 using unfuddle

They have a pimp mylyn based plug-in for eclipse too.

-Original Message-
From: Gerald Guido [mailto:gerald.gu...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 3:17 PM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Best subversion repository


I use Unfuddle and I like it a lot. Most of my projects fit within the 200
meg limit for free accounts. You are right, it does fill up fast especially
if you are working with large(ish) documents like things like MS Office
docs, PSD's and Illustrator files.

IIRC the last time you asked about this you said that you were msotly
versioning stuff like Word docs and such. If that is the case you may wish
to consider services like Box.net that offer butt loads of storage as well
as document versioning on the cheap.  Box.net's has versioning with it's
business plan w/15 gigs for $15/mo.  and a 2 gig file size limit.

Just throwing it out there.

G!


On Wed, Feb 24, 2010 at 1:40 PM, Michael Dinowitz 
mdino...@houseoffusion.com wrote:


 I'm looking at offsite subversion repositories and I'd like to hear
 the pros and cons from people who may have used them. The question is
 more towards tools and usage than anything else. This is what I have:

 Assembla - no real free account, needs the $49 account to be
 effective, what are the tools like?
 Beanstalk - free account, lowest cost ($15) is effective for use, not many
 tools
 unfuddle - free account, lowest cost ($9) is effective for use, though
 it'll fill up fast, looks like a good spread of tools
 codespaces - no free account, lowest cost ($2.99) is effective for
 use, looks like it has a LOT of tools
 xp-dev - free account (with ads), lowest cost ($5) is effective for
 use, looks like a lot of tools

 The free xp-dev or unfuddle both look like something that anyone
 should get into using. The minimum codespaces looks better than either
 of the free options. The minimum xp-dev has so much unlimited (users,
 projects, etc.) that it kind of blows the others away. So which is
 best? Which has the best tools (in your opinion). Step up to the plate
 and let us all know.

 Thanks

 --
 Michael Dinowitz

 



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Re: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread Eric Cobb

I use an old Pentium III Dell desktop with less than 1GB of RAM at home, 
and it works great!  :-)

Thanks,

Eric Cobb
http://www.cfgears.com
ColdFusion - the most profitable dead language I've ever worked with.



Rick Faircloth wrote:
 Assembla's been great for me, too...but I only use the repository as a code
 back-up,
 since I'm a solo developer.  I'm going to check out the less-expensive
 options, however.

 Rick

 -Original Message-
 From: Matt Quackenbush [mailto:quackfu...@gmail.com] 
 Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 1:48 PM
 To: cf-talk
 Subject: Re: Best subversion repository


 I can only speak of Assembla, since I use them.  I am *extremely* pleased
 with their tools and service.

 HTH




 

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RE: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread Rick Faircloth

Do you run Subversion or some other repository software on it?
In other words, do you run your own repository server?

-Original Message-
From: Eric Cobb [mailto:cft...@ecartech.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 3:25 PM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Best subversion repository


I use an old Pentium III Dell desktop with less than 1GB of RAM at home, 
and it works great!  :-)

Thanks,

Eric Cobb
http://www.cfgears.com
ColdFusion - the most profitable dead language I've ever worked with.



Rick Faircloth wrote:
 Assembla's been great for me, too...but I only use the repository as a
code
 back-up,
 since I'm a solo developer.  I'm going to check out the less-expensive
 options, however.

 Rick

 -Original Message-
 From: Matt Quackenbush [mailto:quackfu...@gmail.com] 
 Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 1:48 PM
 To: cf-talk
 Subject: Re: Best subversion repository


 I can only speak of Assembla, since I use them.  I am *extremely* pleased
 with their tools and service.

 HTH




 



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Re: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread Jason Fisher

I've seen a number of suggestions for hosting your own, if you have a separate 
box.  We implemented VisualSVN server about a year ago on a spare scheduling 
server and we've been very happy with it.  Frequent updates of the server 
engine for both functionality and security and the patches have always 
installed gracefully and seamlessly. 

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Re: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread Eric Cobb

Yep, I've got Subversion/Apache running my repositories on port 81, and 
Railo/IIS running my (final test/staging) websites on port 80.  Works 
like a champ.

Thanks,

Eric Cobb
http://www.cfgears.com
ColdFusion - the most profitable dead language I've ever worked with.



Rick Faircloth wrote:
 Do you run Subversion or some other repository software on it?
 In other words, do you run your own repository server?

 -Original Message-
 From: Eric Cobb [mailto:cft...@ecartech.com] 
 Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 3:25 PM
 To: cf-talk
 Subject: Re: Best subversion repository


 I use an old Pentium III Dell desktop with less than 1GB of RAM at home, 
 and it works great!  :-)

 Thanks,

 Eric Cobb
 http://www.cfgears.com
 ColdFusion - the most profitable dead language I've ever worked with.



 Rick Faircloth wrote:
   
 Assembla's been great for me, too...but I only use the repository as a
 
 code
   
 back-up,
 since I'm a solo developer.  I'm going to check out the less-expensive
 options, however.

 Rick

 -Original Message-
 From: Matt Quackenbush [mailto:quackfu...@gmail.com] 
 Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 1:48 PM
 To: cf-talk
 Subject: Re: Best subversion repository


 I can only speak of Assembla, since I use them.  I am *extremely* pleased
 with their tools and service.

 HTH





 



 

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RE: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread Rick Faircloth

And what OS are you using?

-Original Message-
From: Eric Cobb [mailto:cft...@ecartech.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 4:16 PM
To: cf-talk
Subject: Re: Best subversion repository


Yep, I've got Subversion/Apache running my repositories on port 81, and 
Railo/IIS running my (final test/staging) websites on port 80.  Works 
like a champ.

Thanks,

Eric Cobb
http://www.cfgears.com
ColdFusion - the most profitable dead language I've ever worked with.



Rick Faircloth wrote:
 Do you run Subversion or some other repository software on it?
 In other words, do you run your own repository server?

 -Original Message-
 From: Eric Cobb [mailto:cft...@ecartech.com] 
 Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 3:25 PM
 To: cf-talk
 Subject: Re: Best subversion repository


 I use an old Pentium III Dell desktop with less than 1GB of RAM at home, 
 and it works great!  :-)

 Thanks,

 Eric Cobb
 http://www.cfgears.com
 ColdFusion - the most profitable dead language I've ever worked with.



 Rick Faircloth wrote:
   
 Assembla's been great for me, too...but I only use the repository as a
 
 code
   
 back-up,
 since I'm a solo developer.  I'm going to check out the less-expensive
 options, however.

 Rick

 -Original Message-
 From: Matt Quackenbush [mailto:quackfu...@gmail.com] 
 Sent: Wednesday, February 24, 2010 1:48 PM
 To: cf-talk
 Subject: Re: Best subversion repository


 I can only speak of Assembla, since I use them.  I am *extremely* pleased
 with their tools and service.

 HTH





 



 



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Re: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread Michael Dinowitz

The question is not about using subversion, which most would say is a
requirement for professional development. The question is about which
of the external repositories are the best to use. Which has the best
features. Some of the people replying have said that they only use one
of these resources for subversion and have not used the other
features. It's possible that people doing so don't even know what
other features exist.

I want to know what you know about them. I want to know what'll make
me a more productive developer. Feed me your knowledge. :)

--
Michael Dinowitz




On Wed, Feb 24, 2010 at 3:01 PM, Andy Matthews li...@commadelimited.com wrote:

 Are you not considering using Subversion? We've been using it here at
 Dealerskins for over 2 years and have been very pleased. We run our own
 repositories out of our staging server. So as far as cost goes it's free, if
 you have the machine already.

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Re: Best subversion repository

2010-02-24 Thread Cameron Childress

Also check out:

http://www.projectlocker.com/

Supports Git, SVN, Trac, more
Has a free account level
They include some hooks for automatic deployment and some continuous
integration tools too.

I currently use a self hosted VisualSVN repo but I HATE having to deal
with maintaining servers for this sort of thing.  Maintaining Trac and
other tools on top of that and you've just killed a few weekends a
year.

On a trial basis I'm moving one of my projects to the free account on
Project Locker right now and have been happy so far.

-Cameron

On Wed, Feb 24, 2010 at 1:40 PM, Michael Dinowitz
mdino...@houseoffusion.com wrote:

 I'm looking at offsite subversion repositories and I'd like to hear
 the pros and cons from people who may have used them. The question is
 more towards tools and usage than anything else. This is what I have:

 Assembla - no real free account, needs the $49 account to be
 effective, what are the tools like?
 Beanstalk - free account, lowest cost ($15) is effective for use, not many 
 tools
 unfuddle - free account, lowest cost ($9) is effective for use, though
 it'll fill up fast, looks like a good spread of tools
 codespaces - no free account, lowest cost ($2.99) is effective for
 use, looks like it has a LOT of tools
 xp-dev - free account (with ads), lowest cost ($5) is effective for
 use, looks like a lot of tools

 The free xp-dev or unfuddle both look like something that anyone
 should get into using. The minimum codespaces looks better than either
 of the free options. The minimum xp-dev has so much unlimited (users,
 projects, etc.) that it kind of blows the others away. So which is
 best? Which has the best tools (in your opinion). Step up to the plate
 and let us all know.

 Thanks

 --
 Michael Dinowitz

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