
Genuinely asking because we've been through three tool stacks in 18 months and I'm exhausted. Jira is like Excel - everyone hates it, but it’s the universal language of business =) I tried moving my team to Linear last year. The devs loved it, but management freaked out because they couldn't see their precious charts exactly how they liked them. We're a ~17 person IT/dev team at an early-stage startup. Every stack we try hits the same wall - tasks in one place, docs in another, conversations in a third, and nobody remembers where the decision actually got made. The AI angle is what confuses me most. Every tool has added some Copilot button, but it feels bolted on. Notion AI summarizes a doc that's already in front of me. It doesn't know about the ticket in Jira or the thread in Slack where the real context lives. What I actually want is something where AI understands what the team is doing across tasks, docs, and conversations, not just a search bar with GPT stapled to it. Maybe that doesn't exist yet, I don't know… We've been testing a few things lately: Linear for tasks is still great for pure dev workflow, but no real AI beyond basic automations. (We were staying on Linear for dev tasks but moved comms and docs to BridgeApp. The part that actually surprised me was the agents, you can wire them into your own APIs or databases, not just the built-in stuff. It's not perfect but it's the first thing that didn't feel like three products duct-taped together) Height was interesting but feels abandoned. BridgeApp is a newer one, all-in-one with AI agents actually embedded in the workspace, not just a chat plugin. IT-focused. Lark is surprisingly functional but feels like it's built for a different market. ClickUp/Monday: still the kings of everything for everyone, but man, the setup can become a full-time job itself. Shortcut: good middle ground for agile teams who want the power of Jira without the administrative nightmare. \ I’ll be the annoying one here, but maybe the issue isn’t the software choice at all. We often swap one thing for another, hoping a new UI will solve the problem of poor communication. What's your current stack? Curious whether anyone's actually managed to consolidate meaningfully or if the all-in-one thing always breaks down somewhere. Before migrating, I’d genuinely recommend rethinking the whole approach to task tracking in 2026 - why classic ticket systems can no longer keep up with the modern pace, and how teams burn out from excessive administration. The one thing I keep coming back to is whether it's even possible to have a single system for tasks + docs + comms + AI that doesn't feel like a Frankenstein product?! \ \n \
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