Issuetrak vs Forethought
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Issuetrak hardens for serious enterprise deployment — HA support, Azure hosting, off-web-folder attachments.
The visible window is a coherent enterprise-deployment push: high-availability deployment is now supported, Azure joins the hosting-environment list, attachments can live on UNC or local paths outside the web folder, API v2 has new endpoints, Magic Sign-In session length is admin-configurable up to 30 days, and Sys Admins can block risky file types across Windows/Mac/Linux. Smaller UX moves include attachment-count and billing-line indicators on issues and bulk entity import.
Issuetrak is repositioning itself from a small/mid-market self-hosted issue tracker into something deployable inside large IT estates. The combination of HA, Azure, off-web-folder attachments, and API v2 expansion is exactly the deployment-shape work that a procurement team would gate-keep on. Nothing in the feed points to AI features yet — the bet is on owning the regulated/on-prem buyer who can't or won't move to cloud-only ITSM.
Expect AWS hosting support (mirror of the Azure work), more API v2 surface, and probably an SSO/IdP hardening pass to round out the enterprise-deployment story. AI surfaces — agent-assist for ticketing, summarization — are a plausible 2026/2027 add but absent from current signals.
Forethought pivots from answering questions to executing outcomes via Orchestrator and Browser Agents.
Forethought is in the middle of a deliberate platform-narrative shift. April shipped two foundational pieces: Orchestrator, which routes business signals into deterministic AI actions across channels, and Browser Agents, which can take actions in apps that don't expose APIs. Test Suite landed alongside as the validation tooling for agent behavior before deployment. The CEO's 'Next Chapter' post frames the same direction in plain language: AI moving from answering to resolving.
The company is repositioning from a customer-support intent and triage AI to an outcomes-execution layer for enterprise customer experience. Browser Agents are the bet that the long tail of CX work lives in apps without proper APIs — making the agent capable of clicking through them is the moat. Orchestrator and Test Suite are the deterministic-control and validation pieces that make this defensible enough for enterprise procurement.
Expect a tightening of the integration story — pre-built Browser Agent flows for common CX systems like Zendesk and Salesforce Service Cloud — and an explicit outcomes-priced packaging emerging over the next quarter as the company moves past per-seat or per-resolution pricing.
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