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To solve these issues, they developed Atlassian's flagship product, Jira, a project and issue tracking tool, and shifted their focus to selling this software. [24] Then, in 2004, Atlassian launched its team collaboration platform named Confluence. [25] In July 2010, Atlassian raised $60 million in secondaries venture capital from Accel Partners ...
Jira (/ ˈ dʒ iː r ə / JEE-rə) [4] is a software product developed by Atlassian that allows bug tracking, issue tracking and agile project management.Jira is used by a large number of clients and users globally for project, time, requirements, task, bug, change, code, test, release, sprint management.
Confluence is a web-based corporate wiki developed by Australian software company Atlassian. [4] Atlassian wrote Confluence in the Java programming language and first published it in 2004. Confluence Standalone comes with a built-in Tomcat web server and hsql database, and also supports other databases.
On March 7, 2012, Atlassian, which had been using the service internally, announced it had acquired HipChat. [22] On April 24, 2017, HipChat experienced a hacking incident in which user info, messages, and content were accessed. [23] On May 11, 2017, Atlassian announced HipChat Data Center, a self-hosted enterprise chat tool. [24]
Trello is a web-based, kanban-style, list-making application developed by Atlassian. Created in 2011 by Fog Creek Software, [5] it was spun out to form the basis of a separate company in New York City in 2014 [6] [7] [8] and sold to Atlassian in January 2017. [9]
Crucible is a collaborative code review application by Australian software company Atlassian.Like other Atlassian products, Crucible is a Web-based application primarily aimed at enterprise, and certain features that enable peer review of a codebase may be considered enterprise social software.
In the same year, the company surpassed 14 million users and 200,000 businesses across 230 countries worldwide. [11] In 2022, Loom launched Loom HQ as the next iteration of the company’s platform for corporate teams. [12] In 2023, the company was acquired by Atlassian for $975 million. [13]
The premium version, priced at $3/user/month, also includes advanced meeting functionality like group screen sharing, remote desktop control, and dial-in/dial-out capabilities. Stride offered integrations with Atlassian's other products as well as other third-party applications listed in the Atlassian Marketplace, such as GitHub , Giphy , Stand ...