Agile, made easy. One workspace for your team's docs, sprints and tasks, synced to Github, or Gitlab. Tara AI is the simplest product development tool, designed for teams moving rapidly. Free for developers and teams. Now, with API access.
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The UI is so clean, it makes it desirable to use. Reporting is very easy to understand - without any of the complexity that comes with creating reports (like in Jira). I like that it has an opinion - it’s built around agile’s best practices. Easy to reprioritize in between sprints, and the sprint board is easy to understand so it’s great for first time agile teams.
My team has always worked adhoc on everything without properly using a project management tool. Once we adapted our workflow to Tara, it worked wonders for our organization. Tasks are easily grouped under umbrellas (Requirements, i.e. Epics in Jira) and everything is so visual that it's never painful to actually manage your tasks. Sprints make it easy to see what you need to get done this week, and we run daily standups using that view.
Highly recommend Tara to smaller teams that just need to focus on getting stuff done.
Based on our record, Food 52 should be more popular than Tara AI. It has been mentiond 8 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 have not used it personally, but Tara [0] would be another (free) alternative to Jira. [0] https://tara.ai. - Source: Hacker News / 6 months ago
Tara AI — Simple sprint management service. Free plan has unlimited tasks, sprints and workspaces, with no user limits. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
Great advice overall, but I would centralize this list in an app dashboard, e.g., Tara.ai, Azure DevOps, Jira, etc., and automate the outbound updates to the C-suite douche patrol. Source: about 2 years ago
Tara AI — Simple sprint management service. Free plan has unlimited tasks, sprints and workspaces, with no user limits. - Source: dev.to / almost 3 years ago
I had a friend teach me how to cook, I mean I basically observed her doing it and became fascinated by it. Cookbooks came later. I can't remember the titles unfortunately. But I do remember using supercook.com allrecipes.com and food52.com a lot. Rachel Ray also tends to be pretty beginner friendly I think. Source: 12 months ago
America's Test Kitchen is another good all-around choice, as is Epicurious and Food52. Source: almost 2 years ago
Serious Eats is a key multi-author site (particularly the older posts from when Kenji wrote there). David Lebovitz is one of the early, important food bloggers (as well as cookbook author, and Chez Panisse alum); he's now moving to a subscription substack, but the older content is still up on his website. Pardon Your French is another favorite for French home cooking. For extraordinarily creative Asian-influenced... Source: about 2 years ago
Suspiciously Delicious Cabbage (from food52.com), this is one of my favorite cabbage recipes. Source: about 2 years ago
Https://food52.com The New Yorker Cartoon Bank (look up any word, phrase). - Source: Hacker News / over 2 years ago
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