Radoslav Stankov

GitHub Projects - GitHub takes on Trello with new project management tools

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Wes Dunn
Sticking with PivotalTracker for now, but definitely interested to see where this goes. I'd love to see an Organization-level project board that might hold bigger milestones/epics that span across repos, and each repo has its own stories/cards. Also, from a Dev perspective, I like idea of a personal dashboard that was posed by @nevertrending
sielay
Did @github just killed @waffleio and similar?
sielay
Pity it doesn't support checklists (or even checkboxes which are already in GitHub flavored Markdown). Wit that it would be already perfect. Also, if you could link notes easily to issues.
Jared Rauh
Really disappointed with notes within Projects. I was so hopeful that this could transition some of our projects off Trello (I still love Trello, it would just be nice to publicly manage our Github project on Github). Unfortunately, the only way to add content to any card is to create an issue. This doesn't necessarily work for new features and enhancements we have in our backlog. I hope they make some improvements to their "notes" features soon, or this won't be worth it for me.
Adam Lieb
I've been a super happy ZenHub user for quite some time, I'll be curious to see if Github can do it natively as well.
Matt Broberg
As someone working in GitHub daily, this is fantastic news. 🎉
Bruno Lemos
At first I found it really cool, but I hope some missing features will come soon, like the ability to comment and post photos on each card.
paz arando
Finally.
Amit Shekhar
Github Rocks. There is no need of other tools when we have github with all features in addition to its simplicity
Agusti Fernandez Pardo
As someone still very much learning to program, GitHub is for me the boss I don't want to find, I can have seniors tell me what should I do after a quick issue, and work and push PR's daily if I wanted, it's really awesome for collaboration on open-source, so projects should only enrich that experience. I highly recommend anyone starting, to start on open-source, being a freelancer, and being able to advance in my programming skills without compromising my full-time to a 9/5 job as a junior, is a much better option for me. Ofc, If I was in the US I would just do some internship at a good shop, but GitHub is the second best in that regard without as much compromise as a real-life job programming.