I've been using Trac for a while, but I feel unconfortable with its UX/UI and it's not that good for Agile development. Do you any good alternative?

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8 Answers

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Atlassian Jira

The best I have seen so far. It is not free though the starter license is very affordable. There is the possibility to request a free license if you are developping a community/open source project.

Jira is being used by serious customers such as Yahoo, Adobe, Zend Framework, eTrade, and Apache just to name a few.

I tried Mantis, Trac, and some others and I couldn't find all the features and flexibility I needed until I found Jira.

For agile planning there is Greenhopper, a plugin that integrates directly into Jira.

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YIKES! I personally can't stand this thing - it's just too complicated, too powerful, too configurable - a nightmare to use, in my opinion. But it seems to have lots of followers..... I much prefer the simplicity and "you-just-get-it-and-can-use-it-right-away" approach of Fogbugz - it just gets the job done, period. – marc_s Nov 13 '10 at 17:01
Yeah I understand everyone makes its own opinion about softwares, as long as we get productive and organized with a tool it is all that matter to me in the end. – Steven Rosato Nov 13 '10 at 17:50
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FogBugz

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redmine

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Redmine

Assembla, clockingit

I'm using redmine at the moment and very happy with it. It's a full project management suite and it's open source.

Some features: Gantt diagram, you can create Projects and Subprojects, integrate with git, svn, mercurial and some other repositories, wiki (ditaa can be used via plugin), smart-http integration for git, file uploads, time tracking, and much more.

If you don't want to get dirty installing Redmine on your server, there's also assembla.com (very similar to redmine, for free if you don't mind your repository being public) and clockingit (similar to those two but time tracking features are more advanced).

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PivotalTracker

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If you are the only developer you can try what I use: http://www.taskcoach.org/

Task Coach is really a task manager, but it is great for bugs as well.

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I know I am clearly biased in this regards but as an ex-Trac user, I would definitely recommend fixx. We use it internally for our own customised Agile process, so I know it will definitely work for you. Secondly, fixx was built with usability and therefore, UX/UI in mind, so it should address the problem of software complexity and admin nightmares using the "you-just-get-it-and-can-use-it-right-away" approach (I might steal that) marc_s suggests.

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If you need a user-friendly, hosted solution, then I can recommend Bontq.

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