My needs are less about calendars and dates and more about just having my projects and tasks in some database somewhere. My needs are less about calendars and dates and more about just having my projects and tasks in some database said in Anybody use Confluence for their project said in Anybody use Confluence for their project said in Anybody use Confluence for their project management/todos?: Set all their todos with dates and then CalDAV it into some calendar app. But everything I read on it basically people use it for calendaring. I have NextCloud, been thinking about the todo plugin. You can set due dates and stuff and via DAVdroid or OpenTasks, get it on your mobile device. If all you want is a Todo list, it has the "Todo" plugin. If you want something only at your desk, it's got a Decks plugin - think Kanban. Unless all my todos are just written out in a plain text list which I'm not keen on. It did not strike me as something to use for project management and todos. I've had a BookStack install for some months now, I have a couple posts on here about that. I believe has an excellent post on getting BookStack setup quickly here on ML.Įdit: Here is the post for install said in Anybody use Confluence for their project said in Anybody use Confluence for their project management/todos?: I still use BookStack for creating diagrams and quick note taking. I realize I could have done something similar with BookStack and copy and paste, however, Confluence allowed me to re-organize pages a bit easier. This allowed for a standard look across all my pages. I ultimately decided to stick with Confluence for the sole fact that I am able to create a template page and then copy that page over and over while I enter new client's. The draw.io integration almost made me move from Confluence as most of my wikis have network diagrams and making changes in BookStack to those was simple. As far as quick and easy to use, nice interface, copy and paste functions, BookStack was great! It's easy to organize documentation and notes, and can very easily be used as a todo list. I also looked at BookStack, from a thread listed here on ML. I am using it as a wiki for documentation. I only have about 4GB of memory and it functions great and is very responsive. I am currently using Confluence, self-hosted on a Hyper-V server. Todoist is pretty nice, and a yearly billing of $30 isn't that bad, but I was hoping for other options to be on the table. Really? Another another popular one Wrike, which I think is really good, forces you to buy 5 people as a minimum, thus starts at like $25/m. Even Confluence, it's $10 for up to 10 people, but if you pick more than 10, it suddenly jumps to $1500. I'm just very surprised how there can be 900 todo and project management tools out there and none of them fit the needs of a single person with low budget. The only other project I'm considering is OpenProject. I definitely want something that feels modern and efficient. I found a dozen other various self-hosted projects around Github but these things haven't been touched in years and years. But not if it wants to chew up 6GB of RAM and 4 CPUs! It says it wants a quad core processor and like 6GB of RAM! I don't have any VPS that large, I just wanted to throw it on one my cPanel VPS servers at InMotion. The one thing that IS bad, is the server requirements. And for a one-time payment of $10 for self-hosting, that's not bad. But I figure I can make it work as a todo/project manager too. It has some pretty remarkable features for organizing content, or basically, using as a wiki. I then turned to self-hosted products and was really digging in to Confluence. Things that are kind of definitional to what is a task manager. Most will hit you with some pretty major limits, like no comments on todos, no attachments, no scheduling, no sub-tasks, no labeling. It would be nice if there were any products with a half-decent free plan for a single person, but there just isn't. I'm still on the lookout for a todo manager after Producteev went belly up.
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