About Open DevOps
Open DevOps pricing
Open DevOps does not have a free version and does not offer a free trial.
Alternatives to Open DevOps
Open DevOps Reviews
Feature rating
- Industry: Computer Software
- Company size: 51–200 Employees
- Used Daily for 1+ year
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Review Source
Jira, the best technical task management tool!
Overall, it was a great experience using Jira. We're still using it, exploring it and learning that how to improve our development processes and make ease for both management and the developers.
Pros
- Easy for devs to understand
- Easy to integrate with bitbucket
- Easy to integrate third party apps like slack, zephyr and many more
- Help employees to manage their tasks and track their production time
- Help management to keep track of progress of the project and also to get an idea of employee's performance.
Cons
A bit lengthy tool, for new users, one should be able to use it once s/he will spend 1 month on it.
Alternatives Considered
AsanaReasons for Choosing Open DevOps
Because of features and ease.Switched From
SmartsheetReasons for Switching to Open DevOps
Because of having more functionalities, and flexibility.- Industry: Computer Software
- Company size: 11–50 Employees
- Used Daily for 1+ year
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Review Source
My Review of JIRA
As a software developer, I have used life cycle software for many software developments. For more than two years I have been using JIRA in software development. I found it really helpful to address daily developments using this Agile software development model. I have used JIRA software to develop multiple software while using the Agile approach to work for faster software development with continuous development and bug fixes. I found it really helpful to work with JIRA.
Pros
JIRA is one of the best known software used to develop and track software using the Agile method. Using JIRA is easy to track application usage and easy to assign to developers tasks. I have been working with JIRA in software development for over 2 years. At JIRA we used to develop software on the basis of continuous integration and continuous development.
Cons
Honestly, I haven't found a feature or functionality of JIRA that I dislike because it comes with multiple features that are really useful when communicating on a project with team members on the stories.
Reasons for Switching to Open DevOps
I choose JIRA because it's the overall package that is provided by Atlassian. In JIRA it is easy to maintain multiple projects, assigning stories, tracking issues, and moreover the user experience. It's easy to use and interact with the JIRA.- Industry: Construction
- Company size: 1,001–5,000 Employees
- Used Monthly for 1+ year
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Review Source
Dev Ops Is Great
We have enjoyed using it for our environment and find it a genuinely friendly tool to have implemented.
Pros
We use devops for all of our task management for our environment.
Cons
There is nothing that I do not currently like about DevOps.
- Industry: Internet
- Company size: 1,001–5,000 Employees
- Used Daily for 1+ year
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Review Source
Functional for specific purpose but confusing
Jira is a great tool to track progress of a Product Team with Developers and Engineers. Seems like it was built with the intention to help a Dev/Engineer team really thrive on tasks within an Agile workflow. Because of that, there are no bells or whistles. The Design is pretty vanilla and doesn't really wow. In fact, I find that the design actually makes too much of the functionality blend with each other that nothing really sticks out as a Go-To feature in this market. There are so many updates that come with Jira that with the steep learning curve, you're almost always wondering what you can/can't do. Atlassian also makes Asana which is essentially the same tool but geared towards Product/Design. Seems like it doesn't make sense to split half your team here and half your team there. There should be just one tool.
Pros
Once you get passed the learning curve, it's fairly simple. Ability to keep in sync with a Dev team is probably the best overall Pro. Devs seem to be able to understand the features and flows here more than anyone. Integrations with other software make it a consideration. Ability to track in kanban style.
Cons
It's not Aesthetically pleasing at all. There are a lot of features and capabilities that are in-line or buried that aren't evident. There is a pretty big learning curve with Jira and it's purpose. There are SO many capabilities, integrations and functions that are constantly being changed or updated that by the time you catch up to the curve, something changes and you're behind again. Support team also is not super clear on communication.
- Industry: Computer Software
- Company size: 10,000+ Employees
- Used Daily for 2+ years
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Review Source
JIRA enables business to add velocity to their service management tasks and workflows
JIRA is a modern take on a ITSM solution. It is feature loaded yet has a very intuitive User Experience. It has good User Interface as well. JIRA acts as the common interface between Developers, IT ops and business teams and helps different parts of the business colloborate better. It acts as the source of truth for all involves parties and does its basic tasks quite well. It adds velocity to the overall process of task management irrespective of the industry it is used in.
Pros
1. Great User Interface and User Experience.
2. The ability to create custom queues and automatically re-direct issues to these queues saves a lot of time. 3. The inbuilt SLA management and the option of integrating it to third party alert and notification software is impressive.
4. Adding attachment, links and other resources to JIRA ticket is easy and straightforward.
5. It has great audit trail tracking and can act as a source of truth for all parties involved.
Cons
1. The issue search feature could have been a little more customizable and faster.
2. The options available to format the comments on an issue are limited and not very intuitive.