I am searching for a better alternative to osTicket. Can you give any advice?
I would want it not to be bloated with features, since I want to be able to use it without having to get into it a lot
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I am searching for a better alternative to osTicket. Can you give any advice? I would want it not to be bloated with features, since I want to be able to use it without having to get into it a lot
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I've looked into this quite a bit, and here are some of the best options I found. For reference, my choice was HelpSpot for the overall, but SupportTrio has an excellent offering, and there's a completely free version (limited number of users). Free SoftwareSupportTrio (free or paid versions available)
Request Tracker (a.k.a. RT)
Paid Software
Hope that helps! | |||||||
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The world's at your fingertips! Comparison of issue tracking systems | |||||
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Have you tried the Open Ticket Request System? It provides
EDIT: @Thomasschaaf, just saw your edit: Then OTRS might not fit 100% your needs. It has indeed a lot of features. But perhaps you can give a little more information what is wrong with eTicket? | ||||
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At work we use Request Tracker and i have almost only good experiences with using it. It's written in Perl and easy to set up with Apache/Lighttpd (the only web servers i've tried it with). Its easy to integrate with email both using local redirects of email and external/local POP email servers. Its fairly easy to setup and use, and its not in your face when your using it on a day to day basis. But it's also easily hackable. | |||
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OTRS is Perl-based, well-supported. RT is old. Bugzilla is very powerful. Trac also includings tickets, but probably not advanced enough for what you want. See this WP category for more You probably want to be more specific in your request. | |||||
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When osTicket move to propriety software, a side group took the last of the open source versions and now continue it under the name aTicket. They do a very good job and it includes all the features that osTicket had before they turned to the dark side. I use aTicket for all my web host support tickets and I have not had any trouble with it. | |||
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Here's a nice comparison of various systems at Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_issue_tracking_systems | |||
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Another free and simple solution would be sharing an IMAP account. Most MUAs (Mail user Agent, such as Outlook, Thunderbird, ...) support threads, so you could even have them organize replies, etc.. In some way. The advantage of IMAP would be that multiple people could share it and it would synchronize replies, etc. with no extra software needed but the MUA. Or if you use Google Apps For Your Domain, then I guess this is done in their conversation tabs, etc. (if you are using the webmail). Another solution might be a FogBugz or lighthouseapp account. They are free (e.g. FogBugz for up to two people) and generally painless because they are hosted, etc. and you can concentrate on your email. Both of them allow you to auto-create cases/tickets from incoming email. | |||||||
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Gemini is very easy to set-up and use. It's free for 5 users. | |||
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There's also the open source help desk list. | |||
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What don't you like about http://stackoverflow.uservoice.com/? How about http://getsatisfaction.com/ edit See http://www.37signals.com/svn/posts/1650-get-satisfaction-or-else for details of the way they do business - not pretty. /edit For self-hosted, I'm a Mantis Bug Tracker fan. The Wikipedia page already mentioned is a good starting point. | ||||
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I recommend you to use the ITIL ready help desk software with asset management, ManageEngine ServiceDesk Plus. Check out the website. To see some informations about help desk and other help desk software reviews, check it here - IT help desk software | |||
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