Redmine.suse.de (as an inhouse tool) is very close to be a jump in replacement for Trello.com (the outhouse tool). Investigate into setting up a redmine-board so that it has exactly (and only) the features a Trello board has, Investigate into a redmine GUI plugin that would allow drag and drop as nicely as Trello does. redminetaskboard is a candidate for the gui.
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about 11 years ago by b4mboo | Reply
If you really want people to move away from Trello, you'd probably have to come up with some advantages. Thus, implementing "exactly (and only) the features a Trello board has" might just be a waste of time. Additionally, I highly doubt that the mentioned plugin is up for the task to really mimic Trello in all its glory. E.g. a lot of the people here at SUSE are using the Trello iOS / Android app. But, hey, surprise me!
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about 11 years ago by bmwiedemann | Reply
Also note that in some places we collaborate with external people via trello (e.g. Dell crowbar, openSUSE-ARM), so we would need a publicly reachable site, if we wanted to replace those uses.
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about 11 years ago by jospoortvliet | Reply
Then again, there's a public redmine instance on progress.opensuse.org and we have some community members join there already - not unlikely that we will move more and more to redmine. If only because the openSUSE team uses it and that means the coordination for releases, conferences etc will take place there. Having it work a bit easier and trello-like would be awesome!
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about 11 years ago by toscalix | Reply
- We already have a redmine working on the DMZ. The openSUSE Team and the sysadmins use it to interact with company and community at the same time: https://progress.opensuse.org
- Redmine offer a wide range of capabilities to manage interaction and confidenciality of information through groups/user/project permission management, together with a simple but powerful workflow.
- The Trello like Board should be developed as a pluging so it can be packaged, published and distributed in order to be able to be updated.
- Ancor (development) and darix (admin) are the people behind the current tool in openSUSE.
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