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Dashboard

Most project management tools greet you with a firehose: every ticket in the system, every status change, every comment you didn’t ask for. You spend the first fifteen minutes of your day figuring out what actually matters.

Orcha’s dashboard shows you only what needs your attention. Nothing else.

Driven by the simulation. Sections like “Prepare for what’s next” and “Tickets to estimate” are derived from the scheduler’s simulation output — not static queries. When priorities shift or someone takes time off, the dashboard reflects the new reality automatically.

The top of the dashboard surfaces tickets that need your estimate. Toggle between tickets still waiting for your input and ones you’ve already estimated. Three numbers per workflow step, best case, most likely, worst case, and you’re done.

This is how Orcha eliminates the “can you please estimate your tickets” chase. Instead of a manager pinging people on Slack, the dashboard puts unestimated tickets front and center for each person. The scheduler can’t produce accurate dates without estimates, so this section keeps everyone honest without anyone having to nag.

A simple scratchpad for things you need to remember today. Not everything is a ticket. Sometimes you just need a reminder to follow up on a Slack thread or review a PR.

A running log of what you’ve touched recently. No need to reconstruct your day from memory or git blame, it’s all here, ordered by when you last worked on it.

Your upcoming work, ordered by the schedule. This isn’t a backlog dump. It’s the scheduler’s opinion on what you should be working on after your current task, based on priorities, dependencies, and team capacity.

Tickets assigned to you that haven’t been picked up by the scheduler yet. Either they need estimates, they’re missing priority, or they were created after the last schedule run. Either way, they need your attention.

New tickets across your projects. Useful for staying aware of incoming work without subscribing to every notification channel.

A personal weekly view showing what you worked on each day. Always know what you did yesterday, standups take thirty seconds instead of five minutes of scrolling through Slack history. This calendar is visible only to you.