Deskzilla Today
It transforms a web-based workflow into a responsive, native application experience.
It takes a robust but aging web system and gives it a modern, fast, and usable front-end. While the aesthetics are stuck in the past, the functionality is timeless. If you value speed, offline access, and data manipulation, Deskzilla remains the gold standard for Bugzilla clients.
There is no polite way to say this: Deskzilla looks dated. The UI feels very "Java Swing" circa 2012. It lacks the sleek, minimalist design of modern tools like Linear or even newer iterations of Jira. While functional, it can feel cluttered, and new users might find the density of buttons and panels intimidating. deskzilla
(frequently found in package repositories like OpenBSD's pkg lists).
ALM Works, the creator of Deskzilla, also developed the highly popular . While Deskzilla is tailor-made for the Bugzilla ecosystem, JIRA Client provides similar desktop-level speed and offline capabilities for Atlassian JIRA users. Both tools share a similar philosophy: the web is great for accessibility, but the desktop is king for professional-grade productivity. Getting Started It transforms a web-based workflow into a responsive,
: It allows for the creation of visual reports (charts and graphs) to track project progress over time. Resources for Bugzilla and Reporting
If your organization is stuck on Bugzilla and migrating to Jira isn't an option, If you value speed, offline access, and data
Are you trying to a specific type of chart in Deskzilla, or
Deskzilla comes in two versions:
