Breeze is a simple to use project management tool that helps teams work more collaboratively - by keeping everyone on-plan, simplifying your daily workflow and without getting in the way.
Breeze has all the features that you need to manage your projects.
No features have been listed yet.
Breeze's answer
Ruby on Rails, Ruby, JavaScript, CSS, Heroku, AWS.
Breeze's answer
Breeze's answer
Breeze came into being because we noticed a genuine need for a project management tool that is straightforward and user-friendly. Our primary objective was to create a tool that anyone could pick up and use without hassle. We wanted to keep things simple, minimalistic, and focused on the needs of people, not just machines.
Breeze's answer
Breeze's unique selling point is its focus on simplicity and ease of use, making it an attractive option for teams looking for a straightforward project management solution that can be used by anybody.
Breeze's answer
Breeze's approach is centered around the needs of individuals and teams. The software aims to enhance collaboration, communication, and productivity, with a focus on making project management a smoother and more enjoyable experience for everyone involved.
Breeze's answer
Breeze is designed with a focus on user-friendliness, making it a good fit for non-technical users. It doesn't require extensive technical expertise to navigate or set up, allowing individuals from various backgrounds to adopt it easily.
Based on our record, OpenProject seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 4 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
I don't know if these are multi-tenant projects but you could certainly explore them: leantime.io and openproject.org. Source: 12 months ago
I just started messing with OpenProjectOpenProject which seems pretty nice, but I actually bought a lifetime license to Nifty.pm a couple years ago on AppSumo and it is awesome.. Not free or open source or self-hostable though.. :/. Source: over 1 year ago
Openproject.org BIM edition is the closest I got so far, but it lacks the smooth versioning experience of git and the accessibility of a platform like github. Source: over 1 year ago
I know I am asking for a lot here. I worked for a company that used everything from Atlassian and miss the unified experience. Now I am working for a hospital and we are required by law to keep everything on premise. Atlassian makes it very obvious that they are a "go cloud or gtfo" company so... I am kind of searching or something equivalent. Currently using openproject.org as a JIRA replacement, Mediawiki as a... Source: almost 3 years ago
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