

Picasa Web Albums has just been launched by Google, and on a lot of accounts, beats the hell out of Yahoo Photos, Flickr, Kodak Gallery.Ĭheck out that clean Google-style design. Posted on MaApAuthor Chette Soriano Categories Uncategorized Tags productivity, web apps Leave a comment on Taking the plunge with a new task management system (Teambox) Picasa Web Albums – a true Picasso in online photo sharing I hope & I pray that we will be sticking with Teambox for a long time. I was able to find out what exact feature they have included in their roadmap. Weirdly enough, what finally sealed the deal was their Help site. But I like the capability to switch views of tasks (vertical/horizontal) and the integrated calendar & gantt chart. They have a big problem with speed, I don’t like the fact that you can’t create private projects that absolutely noone can see, and we really need subtasks support. The deal breaker was not being able to mark anything as resolved - it forces us to use it as kanban instead. We fell in love with its simplicity, speed, and their mobile apps. And that was a big thing for us, as we have a lot of adhoc one-week projects that suddely come up. It was being used by Teambox & Trello as a kanban system, but I knew we could use it to segregate subprojects.

You could tell how I discovered and fell immediately in love with the vertical view of tasks. The only things I saw were words like memory retrieval, workflow, big teams, growth, etc.Īfter a week of researching the likes of Do.com, Mavenlink, PivotalTracker, Producteev, Teambox, Teamly, Trello, and Wrike, we shortlisted it to two: Teambox and Trello. Not even in their monthly newsletter when they mention their roadmap. I wanted proof that the things we needed were at least planned, and that all we had to do was wait.īut I couldn’t find those reasons anywhere. We’ve been using it for such a long time, and I was secretly trying to find a reason to stick with it.
#ASANA VS PRODUCTEEV 2016 FREE#
Everything just looks too cluttered.Īs more of our team started adopting Asana (we already maximized the free allocation of 30 users), we knew it was time to upgrade.

We have more than 50 projects and lot of tasks under each project. The user interface was just very overwhelming.We’ve always wanted to upgrade, especially since we know we need about 50++ users, but there was something about Asana that was just never right. We also love, although never really maximized the potential, of its integration with Dropbox.

I can see almost in real-time what tasks were updated by others. And since we work in a company heavily reliant on email, this was a big plus.Īsana was also very fast. We loved its email integration – just send/forward an email to a specific address, and it will automatically be created as a task, and include the email attachments. We’ve been using it for more than 6 months, I believe. At the back of my mind, I welcomed it, because it allowed me to start from zero and review tasks that are still worth pursuing.Īsana, however, was the longest one we’ve ever used. We’ve been changing task/project-management systems so much that we just got used to it. Prior to using Asana, the team have gone thru Basecamp, ActiveCollab, and GoPlan.
