Meet Adeptdev — a lightweight, developer-first project manager built for solo front-end builders. I built this because every existing tool felt bloated, slow, or designed for huge teams. Adeptdev keeps things simple: fast Kanban, clean tasks, GitHub integration, and a workspace that helps you ship — not get buried in menus. If you're a solo dev or small team that wants something modern, simple, and actually pleasant to use, give it a spin 🙌
Hey Product Hunt community! 👋
We built this tool for front-end developers and small teams who want to stay in sync with their codebase without the manual overhead. With AdeptDev, your task cards update automatically as your branches and code change—no extra clicks, no forgotten updates. Everything you see on your board always reflects the latest work happening in your repo.
A few things we’re particularly excited about:
- Automatic updates: Task cards stay in sync with your branches in real time.
- Clear context: See branch info, pull requests, and key task details all in one place.
- Lightweight workflow: No bloated features—just what you need to stay productive.
We’d love to hear your thoughts! Any feedback, feature ideas, or ways we could make it more useful for your workflow would be amazing. Let’s make project management smoother for devs, together.
AdeptDev feels like a strong attempt to automate away the usual human messiness in software workflows. The upside is clear: faster iteration and fewer manual bottlenecks. The downside is whether the system can stay reliable when specs shift or edge cases pile up. If it handles that well, it could be a meaningful step forward for teams trying to scale without adding more engineering overhead.
Congrats on the launch! The design is really clean and I love that it feels focused and lightweight - so many dev tools end up bloated and overwhelming. This looks like it wants to stay useful without becoming "everything for everyone."
Two questions about privacy (couldn't find anything about this on the website):
1. How do you handle data when connecting to GitHub? Where does my code live?
2. What about all the things I enter into the tool? Is that data encrypted on your servers?
Would love to understand the security model before going all in.