Plane vs Timeneye
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.
Timeneye, now Lucen Track, adds MCP access and rounds out time tracking
Timeneye rebranded to Lucen Track and is filling the gaps of a serious time-tracking tool: custom fields across every object, global non-billable phases and tags, time-off tracking with approvals, and an Outlook add-in. The standout is an MCP server that lets AI assistants read and write time entries directly.
The product is maturing from timesheets toward a configurable work-and-billing record while opening an AI-interop surface. The MCP server bets that users will manage time through assistants like Claude and Cursor rather than only the app UI, alongside steadier depth work in billability and custom fields.
Expect the AI/MCP surface to deepen with more actions and reporting exposed to assistants, plus continued billing-side depth as the non-billable and custom-field work points toward richer invoicing. The rebrand hints at more products consolidating under the Lucen umbrella.
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