When comparing Sprintly vs TimeGuru, the Slant community recommends Sprintly for most people. In the question“What are the best feature tracking/planning tools for small development teams?” Sprintly is ranked 11th while TimeGuru is ranked 15th. The most important reason people chose Sprintly is:
Deep integration with GitHub (items can be commented on, closed, updated via commits or pull requests, support for multiple GitHub repositories, etc.). Also integrates to Slack, BitBucket, others.
Specs
Ranked in these QuestionsQuestion Ranking
Pros
Pro Integrations & Extensions
Deep integration with GitHub (items can be commented on, closed, updated via commits or pull requests, support for multiple GitHub repositories, etc.). Also integrates to Slack, BitBucket, others.
Pro Intuitive UI
Different types of items (User Stories, Tasks, Bugs, and Tests) show as a different color. Items can be tagged and then tags can be used to filter, sort and search for items. Different views show progress against milestones, and how many items are assigned to each team member.
Pro Free version
Free for up to 10 users.
Pro Simple userinterface with advanced functions
Pro Helpful support
Pro has every function you need and more, incredibly easy setup guide when you create the system
Even with the app missing, this the most userfriendly system I have tried so far. When creating the system, you follow a very simple guide, that walks you through all the system's modules and functions, and allows you to customize it all to fit your needs. Also, you can easily get the app icon on your phone, that opens up the system in your browser when you click it. It works just as good as an actual app in my opinion.
Cons
Con No local installation, everything is foreign cloud hosted
No option for local installation - cloud only that is hosted on foreign servers to the US.
Con No free option that can get expensive
Pricing starts at $19 for 6 team members and range all the way up to $399 a month for the enterprise edition.
Con no app, still easy to use from the phone though.
The app missing is not a huge problem for me at all. They have a guide for both Android and Apple on how to get the icon on your phone's homepage, which works just as fine. The only difference is that the system opens up in your mobile browser instead. It almost looks like an app.