New answers tagged code
3
Either TFS online or Bitbucket are good options. Both of them are free to use. I use TFS because it is the best of breed among the free project management options that link to code directly, and because I'm a .NET developer it is the most integrated with my platform.
Alot of it depends on the code base you are programming in though. I prefer to use TFS for ...
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BitBucket gets my recommendation. Unlimited Free private GIT or Mercurial repos as long as 5 or less users are allowed access to any given repo. If you are hiring programmers from the Open Source world GIT is probably the Source Control you'll want to use though BitBucket does not provide free Bug-Tracking tools.
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We host our repository at Assembla, which also provides ticketing, forums, email notifications etc.
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A company I used to work for had us use redmine. We never uploaded code through it, however it does integrate with SVN which we did use. If you have them on separate projects you can create separate repo's and limit access to each one.
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How about TFS Online? http://tfs.visualstudio.com/
Free for less than 5 users (and for a short time free for even more than 5 users).
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Well it depends on a whole range of things that basically boil down to "what the market will stand" which means ask a sample of them and see what they come back with.
If your going to ask around then have a "smallish" unit of work (something under 1 month) for them to all quote on ... if your not a techie then this is 4-8 screens / pages. Get each one to ...
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If you're looking for the "industry standard" you can check out sites like GlassDoor.com to see salaries and hourly rates, but this information is moot when it comes to freelancers.
Freelance programmers rates change depending on too many factors for anyone to give a "proper" answer:
• Skill level
• Years of Experience
• Work history/Jobs accomplished ...
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