PS I just became aware of ProjectLibre, that could also be a strong contender.

--
Dr Dominik Wujastyk
Department of South Asia, Tibetan and Buddhist Studies,
University of Vienna,
Spitalgasse 2-4, Courtyard 2, Entrance 2.1
1090 Vienna, Austria
and
Adjunct Professor,
Division of Health and Humanities,
St. John's Research Institute, Bangalore, India.
Project | home page | HSSA | PGP




On 19 March 2015 at 15:32, Dominik Wujastyk <wujastyk@gmail.com> wrote:
Many thanks to those who have answered off and on list.  After some rather supericial evaluations and trials, I've decided that qdPM shows promise.  All its built-in categories can be renamed to things that make sense for an academic user.  It's not too complicated.  It's in Softaculous, so it can be installed on most servers with one click.

Best,
Dominik


--
Dr Dominik Wujastyk
Department of South Asia, Tibetan and Buddhist Studies,
University of Vienna,
Spitalgasse 2-4, Courtyard 2, Entrance 2.1
1090 Vienna, Austria
and
Adjunct Professor,
Division of Health and Humanities,
St. John's Research Institute, Bangalore, India.
Project | home page | HSSA | PGP




On 19 March 2015 at 13:17, Dominik Wujastyk <wujastyk@gmail.com> wrote:
Dear colleagues, is anyone using open-source project management software to manage a group of people working together?  I'm thinking of suites like Redmine, ToDoYu, qdPM, Admidio and so on.  Most of these products come out of the software development community, but as an increasing number of us work in the context of funded projects with multiple participants - sometimes in different locations - I think one or other of these tools could be helpful even to indologists.

Best,
Dominik Wujastyk