dotProject

dotProject is a web-based, multi-user, multi-language project management application. It is free and open source software, and is maintained by an open community of volunteer programmers.

dotProject
Developer(s)Alberto Aliverti AKA Albertone//Adam Donnison, Karen Chisholm, Gregor Erhardt, Ivan Peevski, Eamon Brosnan, Benjamin Young
Stable release
2.1.9 / May 25, 2018 (2018-05-25)
Operating systemAny
PlatformPHP
TypeProject management
Licensev1.x was BSD, v2.x is GPL v2[1]
Websitehttp://www.dotproject.net/

History

dotProject was originally developed by Will Ezell at dotmarketing, Inc. to be an open source replacement for Microsoft Project, using a very similar user interface but including project management functionality. Begun in 2000, the project was moved to Sourceforge in October 2001.

The project stalled in late 2002 when the original team moved to dotCMS. Subsequently Andrew Eddie and Adam Donnison, two of the more active developers, were granted administration rights to the project. Andrew continued to work on the project until he moved on to Mambo and later Joomla. Adam remains an administrator.

In late 2007, the new dotProject team began a major redevelopment using the Zend Framework, with version 3 (dP3) the expected target release to be utilising it.[2] A fork called web2project was initiated at the same time.

Support and community

Volunteers provide free support in the community forum, while the core development team offers commercial support via the Priority Support Forum.

As of May 2013, there were over 50,210[3] registered users in the dotProject forums and an average of 500–700 downloads each day.[4]

gollark: Interestingly, Android actually uses Java for all apps for horrible historical reasons.
gollark: This is why you should never let anyone have access to any computing device of any kind in your room etc.
gollark: Unicode is actually kind of bad. Unfortunately we need it because apparently not everyone speaks English. It's inconvenient.
gollark: I agree.
gollark: Unicode defines the symbols, Twitter's Twemoji is a common standard for how they look.

See also

  • Comparison of time tracking software
  • List of project management software

References

  1. "News: New License for 2.0 release
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2008-12-19. Retrieved 2008-12-14.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-05-06. Retrieved 2013-05-23.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. Sourceforge Stats Archived June 10, 2006, at the Wayback Machine


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