I wish this were an article about some hot new documentation tool instead of another misguided psalm to slack & kanban.<p>Making docs sexy would be a big quality of life boost for programmers and the people who love them (i.e. project managers and users of software).
ZenHub is free for teams under 5 people. And it's great.<p>* ZenHub - Agile GitHub Project Management || <a href="https://www.zenhub.com/" rel="nofollow">https://www.zenhub.com/</a><p>Also I use a tool that keeps labels in sync across GitHub repos.<p>* github-label-sync || <a href="https://www.npmjs.com/package/github-label-sync" rel="nofollow">https://www.npmjs.com/package/github-label-sync</a><p>Harvest for time tracking.<p>* Simple Online Time Tracking Software - Harvest || <a href="https://www.getharvest.com/" rel="nofollow">https://www.getharvest.com/</a><p>Red Pen for annotations. (Does't integrate with anything and that pisses me off -- how freakin' hard would it be to build web hooks so it could tie into Slack?! But on the whole it's got an easy to use interface.)<p>* Red Pen || <a href="https://redpen.io/" rel="nofollow">https://redpen.io/</a><p>While I like Slack a lot, one client I have uses Discord... and it's not bad.<p>* Discord - Free Voice and Text Chat for Gamers || <a href="https://discordapp.com/" rel="nofollow">https://discordapp.com/</a>
Matches more or less what we do as a 4-man team.<p>I'm curious why they used appear.in instead of Slack's audio/video conferencing? The latter is too new?