![]() I also looked at BookStack, from a thread listed here on ML. I am using it as a wiki for documentation. I only have about 4GB of memory and it functions great and is very responsive. I am currently using Confluence, self-hosted on a Hyper-V server. Todoist is pretty nice, and a yearly billing of $30 isn't that bad, but I was hoping for other options to be on the table. Really? Another another popular one Wrike, which I think is really good, forces you to buy 5 people as a minimum, thus starts at like $25/m. Even Confluence, it's $10 for up to 10 people, but if you pick more than 10, it suddenly jumps to $1500. I'm just very surprised how there can be 900 todo and project management tools out there and none of them fit the needs of a single person with low budget. The only other project I'm considering is OpenProject. I definitely want something that feels modern and efficient. ![]() I found a dozen other various self-hosted projects around Github but these things haven't been touched in years and years. But not if it wants to chew up 6GB of RAM and 4 CPUs! It says it wants a quad core processor and like 6GB of RAM! I don't have any VPS that large, I just wanted to throw it on one my cPanel VPS servers at InMotion. The one thing that IS bad, is the server requirements. And for a one-time payment of $10 for self-hosting, that's not bad. But I figure I can make it work as a todo/project manager too. It has some pretty remarkable features for organizing content, or basically, using as a wiki. I then turned to self-hosted products and was really digging in to Confluence. ![]() Things that are kind of definitional to what is a task manager. Most will hit you with some pretty major limits, like no comments on todos, no attachments, no scheduling, no sub-tasks, no labeling. It would be nice if there were any products with a half-decent free plan for a single person, but there just isn't. I'm still on the lookout for a todo manager after Producteev went belly up.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |