Plane vs OpenProject
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Plane pushes AI into pages and turns itself into a platform you can publish MCP apps from.
Plane, the open-source project-management tool, is shipping a dense stream of features on two fronts: an in-product query language (PQL) that now runs across dashboards, widgets, and its AI chat, and AI authoring embedded directly into Pages. Underneath, it has been maturing the fundamentals — a redesigned roles-and-permissions system, Epics as a first-class work item type, and the ability to publish MCP applications from Plane itself.
The arc is Plane becoming both an AI-native workspace and an extensible platform. PQL is turning it into a queryable data layer that the AI chat sits on top of, while MCP app publishing signals ambitions beyond a single tool toward being a substrate other agents and apps build on. Expect continued convergence of the AI, query, and pages surfaces, with enterprise-grade access control as the foundation.
The next moves likely deepen the AI-plus-PQL loop — more natural-language querying and AI actions across work items and dashboards — and expand the MCP app ecosystem now that publishing is live.
OpenProject grinds out steady releases while hardening against a bug-bounty backlog of CVEs.
OpenProject is in a maintenance-heavy stretch: a run of 17.x point releases mixes small features with a steady stream of security patches surfaced by its EU-sponsored bug bounty. Feature work is incremental but pointed — project-based work package identifiers ease Jira migrations, and 17.6 adds an XWiki integration linking project management to enterprise knowledge. The cadence is high but a large share of releases are corrective.
The product is consolidating as a credible open-source Jira alternative rather than chasing new categories. Recent features — Jira-friendly identifiers, XWiki knowledge links, Baselines refinements — target enterprise buyers weighing a migration. Security discipline, with multiple CVEs patched across back-ported 17.2 through 17.4 lines, signals a push for enterprise trust.
Expect continued 17.x point releases pairing migration-friendly features with back-ported security fixes; the Jira-migration and enterprise-knowledge threads are the ones to watch build out.
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