At it again with another Ginseng version. Watching and listening to conversation at my job about tracking work, it seems to me there is still a need for a task-tracking app that finds a sweet spot of simplicity and structure. Basecamp is chaos. TFS (Azure DevOps) is way too complicated and admin-heavy. GitHub might've been nice, but switching to Git was going to bring intolerable learning curve and risks. There are of course other options like Monday, Clickup, Clubhouse, and no doubt many more like it. Smartsheet is being considered. At the end of the day though, apart from its having a great web implementation, it's still just a spreadsheet with no inherent structure. I think any of these apps might have potential, but I'm most happy when I'm creating and thinking up stuff. Moreover, I don't think any of the tools on the market today (except maybe for Clubhouse) really hit the sweet spot of simplicity and structure that I keep envisioning.
I'm looking for a lighter, more functional UI that would partly mimic Basecamp when it comes to ease of adding new items. In G8, I envision entering new items through a single textbox spanning the container width. There would be a button on the right side to expand an editor (Froala) so you can enter more details right there (with screenshot paste, of course). There would be straightforward drag and drop priority ordering. You'll also be able to right-click and insert items within a list. I will have to get lots of help on these fancy client-side behaviors!
Structurally, G8 will incorporate lessons learned, and simplify several models. There will still be Activities that can be customized by Organization. HandOff sort of replaces G6 TaskActivity. WorkItemDevelopment is also new, and partly replaces G6 TaskActivity.
G8 will also take a cue from GitHub Issues, and mimic some of its features where appropriate as far as how lists of items are presented and filtered. Instead of G6 Features, G8 will have Projects. Milestones will be there also, but with required due dates. I don't think Milestones make sense without a date.
Ginseng is still focused on being a lightweight task and project management solution focused on providing a straightforward view of
- business priorities/requests
- who's working on what
- who's waiting on who for testing, deployment to production, code review, development, etc
- what am I supposed to be working on
The source is open, but configuration is secret within my team at Aerie. At this time, I don't make a blank database nor default configuration available. I'm open to offering a blank database and default configuration, but haven't gotten around to it yet.