I have used Primavera Teamplay and its another
daunting task to learn it.
Now that i am not in to project management part of the
world we use scheduling in MS Project.
Santosh
--- Ari Feldman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
back in the day, i used M$ Project then at another
organization we used M$
Please define Enterprise? My only experience with the word is that it's
usually used by marketing dweebs to justify 6-figure implementation and
licensing costs.
On Thu, Mar 27, 2008 at 10:22 AM, Vishal Iyer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm specifically looking for enterprise level, cross functional
back in the day, i used M$ Project then at another organization we used M$
Project Server.
unfortunately, no one ever used it because of the high learning curve and
the fact that schedules became as worthless as US dollars in Europe. :-)
now that i'm no longer involved in project focused work,
I've used OmniPlan (http://www.omnigroup.com/applications/omniplan/)
which is a typical PM tool, gant charts and timelines.. stuff like
that. It's good, but Mac only.
The other thing I've done on projects is use an issue tracking system
like Trac. It allows you to set up milestones with dates,
Never used it, but there's this: http://www.projectx.com/ (Again, it's Mac
only, but it looks Windows friendly in some respects, like reporting.)
-ty
Welcome to the Interaction Design Association (IxDA)!
To post to this list ...
Collaboration and communication is definitely a major aspect and there are
bound to be redundancies waste in a large project with 100+ people across
half a dozen time zones. Some of it is probably needed, especially at
mission critical stages. But if a tool can help manage all this, that would
be
you touch on a good point. most of the solutions that have been references
from M$ Project Server to various OS-specific project management or
issue-tracking systems are all capable of doing what they're designed to do.
the biggest hurdle is actual rollout and use. case in point: i was
previously