Unless the JIRA frontpage can be skinned into something without 85,000
links and buttons, JIRA is fundamentally not going to be a good idea
if its going to be used by end-users.

On Jul 15, 6:28 am, Mark Fortner <[email protected]> wrote:
> JIRA supports voting and can also be configured to automatically
> create issues from emails.  You would need to check with your provider
> to find out which features have been enabled. Atlassian also provides
> a hosted service if you don't want to handle managing the server
> yourself.
>
> Hope this helps
>
> Mark
>
>
>
>
>
> On Tuesday, July 14, 2009, Michael Neale <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Its interesting how people are never really satisfied with bug
> > tracking, despite there being quite a market and competition.
>
> > I guess cause they are really trying to solve 2 overlapping problems:
> > bugs and issue tracking for project teams with some project
> > management, and on the other side is it a place for end users to log
> > issues/requests/bugs etc... (the latter are the ones that might be
> > "scared away").
>
> > I sort of wonder if a solution is something like JIRA for the project
> > side, and then for a more user driven front end something like
> > uservoice - where things get voted on, it aggressively de-dupes
> > things...
>
> > On Jul 14, 10:35 pm, Straun <[email protected]> wrote:
> >> As an open source project surely you must rate exposure to your
> >> community as highly desirable?
>
> >> My only observation is that strangely Google code does not get much
> >> exposure via Google itself, instead projects on SF get the best
> >> exposure. This might be because the page ranking systems rate SF long
> >> standing might above googlecode's fresh faced approach.
>
> >> I have yet to see if Kenai does any better.
> >> Good Luck.
>
> >> On Jul 14, 12:13 pm, Reinier Zwitserloot <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >> > I'm looking around for online project hosting, and frankly, I'm not
> >> > really finding the perfect solution.
>
> >> > NB: JIRA gets a double negative because it's utterly useless for Joe
> >> > Schmoe who would like to file a bug. You get a massive screen filled
> >> > with bells and whistles, which is just going to scare people away.
> >> > Google Code's home-grown issue tracker, but then without requiring you
> >> > to have a google login, that'd be perfection.
>
> >> > kenai: Supports git (++), wiki (+), JIRA or bugzilla as issue tracking
> >> > (--). Bonus: Netbeans integration.
>
> >> > github: Supports git (++), wiki (+), useless home-rolled issue tracker
> >> > (--). Bonus: Lots of repository visuals.
>
> >> > google code: Only supports hg (-), wiki (+), nice homegrown issue
> >> > tracker (+). Bonus: It's google, so stable under load.
>
> >> > sourceforge: Vague sense of being from the 90s (-), Supports git (++),
> >> > no wiki (-), not so nice homegrown issue tracker (-).
>
> >> > None of them really convince me. Right now I'm hosting the repository
> >> > and wiki on github, but hosting the downloads and the issue tracker on
> >> > google code. I wonder if that's even allowed on those services. I must
> >> > say I looked at sourceforget only for writing this post and they've
> >> > done quite a job on improving the look. It used to be that your
> >> > average user would get utterly overwhelmed by the vast amount of
> >> > options, almost all of which led to empty pages because project admins
> >> > didn't use any of those niche features.
>
> >> > Which ones am I missing (It is an open source project, but if it costs
> >> > a little, that might be okay)?
>
> >> > The perfect project hosting:
>
> >> > - git support (required)
> >> > - wiki (nice to have)
> >> > - bug tracking that isn't going to scare away a user, and preferably
> >> > doesn't require a user to create an account first (required)
> >> > - hosting some sort of static homepage (nice to have)
> >> > - download section that supports direct linking (required - no user is
> >> > going to navigate a forest to download something)
>
> --
> Mark Fortner
>
> blog:http://feeds.feedburner.com/jroller/ideafactory
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