Vikunja vs MeisterTask
Side-by-side trajectory, velocity, and editorial themes.
Vikunja crossed the v1.0 finish line and pivoted hard into security hardening.
Vikunja shipped two v1.0 release candidates through late 2025 and early 2026, then jumped to a v2 series whose first widely-tagged point release, v2.2.1, is dominated by security work. The latest release patches multiple SSRF and IDOR vulnerabilities, enforces disabled/locked-account semantics across every auth surface (OIDC, API tokens, CalDAV, LDAP), and adds a shared SSRF-safe HTTP client that webhooks and migrations now route through. User-facing feature work has slowed; the visible energy is in plumbing and audit cleanup.
The arc moves from feature-completion (S3 storage, drag-and-drop project moves, hover previews in late 2025) toward platform credibility — closing security gaps a self-hosted task tool needs to clear before serious team adoption. The rapid version-number jump from v1.0.0-rc4 to v2.2.1 in two months suggests v1.0 shipped and the team tagged a v2 line aimed at addressing accumulated authz debt. Expect the next several releases to keep the security-first posture rather than return to a feature push.
The next release will likely continue closing remaining authz edges (more IDOR audits, additional credential-stripping in API responses) and bundle a translations and dependency sweep. A user-facing feature push probably waits until the security work plateaus.
MeisterTask hardens enterprise muscle around workload planning while polishing daily team workflows.
MeisterTask is iterating on two parallel surfaces: the everyday task graph (checklist copy, blocked-dependency warnings, watchers-via-automation) and a deliberately upmarket workload tier (capacity planner gated to Enterprise, team workload widget gated to Business). The mix suggests retention work on lower-tier users while building a differentiated reason for admins to upgrade. Recent UX moves around the Home screen and Note tables show parallel investment in surface customization.
The workload planner is the directional bet — MeisterTask is positioning against tools like Asana and ClickUp for portfolio-level visibility, not just board-level task tracking. Smaller releases (custom fields in reports, automation-driven watchers, tables inside Note) cluster around making the same data exportable, reportable, and queryable. The arc is from task tracker toward a plannable team-operations layer.
Expect more reporting and cross-project view work to follow — likely resource-allocation extensions to the workload planner, plus deeper rollup support for the custom-field surface that's now reportable.
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