I suggest Jira (http://www.atlassian.com/software/jira/), it's a very cool bug/project tool, and the guys give free licenses to open source projects.
Sean On Wed, Oct 09, 2002 at 01:11:14PM -0500, Ian Bicking wrote: > > On Wed, 2002-10-09 at 11:16, Erik Forsberg wrote: > > However, I really don't like the SF bug tracking tool. It's not > > advanced enough compared to Bugzilla. I could probably host a Webware > > project in our (Lysator Academic Computer Society)'s Bugzilla if > > you're interested. > > I'd be interested, but a bug database is only useful if we pay > attention. So -- to any of the other developers (that being anyone who > wants to help with Webware) -- does this sound of interest, and would > you help keep on top of this? > > I'm not entirely sure the SF bug tracker isn't enough. We don't really > need a sophisticated system (since we're not using any system at all, so > it's hardly like the system isn't sophisticated enough)... maybe we just > need a system that nags us more (and then of course we need to publicize > that system). Maybe SF can do this, maybe not... > > Ian > > > > > ------------------------------------------------------- > This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek > Welcome to geek heaven. > http://thinkgeek.com/sf > _______________________________________________ > Webware-devel mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/webware-devel ------------------------------------------------------- This sf.net email is sponsored by:ThinkGeek Welcome to geek heaven. http://thinkgeek.com/sf _______________________________________________ Webware-devel mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/webware-devel