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Best I ever used was Primavera
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A lot of it is good ... the question is whether it would do what you want it to do.
Your Q implies that you don't want MSProject because you use Win & Mac. But MSP does work on both. MSP Server is hugely powerful, but you need to invest a lot of time (and money) in setting it up, and the investment wouldn't be worth it unless you're running a fairly complex portfolio of change activity.
I've been using MSP for years, I know it better than any other package and it's always done what I've needed it to do. Hence I'm an advocate. But it's not easy to get to grips with, there's a lot of hidden and/or unituitive functionality, so casual users can easily miss stuff.
But it really does depend on how your organisation works. How process-heavy and fixed your PM methodology is. What reporting your governance structures require (and hence what the software needs to produce). How big/complex your projects are (you can "plan" and monitor small projects quite adequately on Excel!). What other apps it would have to integrate with (Risk Logs, Resource Scheduling, Finance Reporting, et al).
That's more like requirements!
When do you need an answer? I can go ask a couple of PM communities for experiences & recommendations.
Remember, it's easier to criticise than create!
Hmmm.
This looks like it might tick your boxes. I've never used it, so I'm judging it by the website and a couple of reviews.
Good news is you're what's called Wagile.
http://www.rationalplan.com/project-management-products.php
Remember, it's easier to criticise than create!
Agile works by vertically slicing business hierarchies and relationships... until you've done that you've an Agile ideal your working towards.. the moment you stop working towards it you're Wagile if you rely on 1970s S/E techniques or FrAgile if you're making your own up that aren't in keeping with the Agile manifesto