Today, we are announcing the general availability of the new and improved Projects powered by GitHub Issues. You can use it, or the accompanying project board, along with custom fields, to track a sprint, plan a feature, or manage a large-scale release. Built like a spreadsheet, project tables give you a live canvas to filter, sort, and group issues and pull requests. The new GitHub Projects connects your planning directly to the work your teams are doing in GitHub and flexibly adapts to whatever your team needs at any point. But then our planning is disconnected from where development happens and quickly goes stale. Often, we find ourselves creating a spreadsheet or pulling out a notepad just to have the space to think. Tools that hard-code a specific methodology are too specific and rigid to flex to whatever the moment demands. As teams and projects grow, how we work evolves. Planning and tracking is at the heart of how great development teams operate and essential to developer velocity. I love working for a company where every single day, we lace up our running shoes and add some cayenne pepper to our coffee so that we can smash the ball out of the park for developers across the globe. ![]() From helping easily secure projects with Dependabot to enabling faster coding with GitHub Copilot, our mission is to facilitate an unsurpassed developer experience. At GitHub, we strive to help developers do the best work of their lives.
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