On 19 August 2010 14:09, Cornelius Mostert
<corneliusmost...@googlemail.com>wrote:

> Hi
>
> The company I work for has outgrown their Change Management Solution. They
> have developers in US, Canada, India and maybe soon in China and I was
> wondering what solutions are there for:
>
>    1. a global development market, it needs to be fast and I guess it will
>    be web based.
>    2. it would be best if it could track the change/bug detail right down
>    to the file version that has been changed ( the current solution keeps
>    Change objects and file objects and connect the 2 on a version level so you
>    could go back and get al the files (and correct version of the file) done
>    for a change OR look at a file version and see what change objects link to
>    it)
>
> I know about:
>
>    - MS Source Safe (not change management as such but a source vault) -
>    Non web
>    - Rational Rose /Clear Case (worked on it 10 years back) - good but
>    expensive I think, not sure about the web side
>    - AllChange - good all rounder but struggle a bit on the global front,
>    a wee bit to slow for the US / Canada (but then what will be fast enough 
> for
>    them???) - Does have a web interface
>    - Do not know enough about subversion to say anything
>
> Yes we are a MS win house but as it will be web based it does not matter so
> much.
>
> thanx
>
> --
> _________________________________________
> Cornelius Mostert
> Senior IT Specialist
> United Kingdom: 075 2233 4818
> International: 0044 75 2233 4818
>
> Hello Comelius

Open source solution
A combination of a version control system [Subversion | Git | Mercurial] and
a bug tracking system [Jira <http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/> |
Trac] - a large number of open source projects use Jira and many companies I
have worked with really like it. - http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/

Online solution (free/commercial)
Assembla.com - an online developer service with subversion and git
repositories, wiki, ticket tracking system and a whole host of agile
sounding stuff.  You can get free public service or paid for closed service
- I currently use this for training projects and coding dojos

Software as a service
Service-now.com - a very flexible service management tool that can be easily
configured and included incident, change and release management
functionality - you would need to add a version control system to this
though.

Commercial / Microsoft solution
Microsoft Team Foundation Server - this is not great for very large project
and is not as nice as Team City.
Team City - http://www.jetbrains.com/teamcity/ -  (free for 20 users) - very
easy to set up and use, not as expensive as Microsoft I believe.


-- 
John Stevenson
Lean Agile Consultant / Coach
jr0cket.com  |  leanagilemachine.com
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