Hello,As per September 2016, what's the status about full (ie. both about users and staff sides) responsive themes? Searching quickly today, what I understand is that osTicket could be "themifiable" (whatever theme, reponsive or not) a day but w/o accurate deadline because of the difficulty to separate its current logic from the user-interface. Right?Also, awaiting this important day*, I found two places for full responsive themes (two only):- DMT Club at https://www.dmt-club.com/en/themes-extensions.html with 3 themes for osTicket 1.9.12/13 from EUR39 for 1 site & 3 month updates.- osTicket AWESOME at https://osticketawesome.com/ with 1 theme for osTicket 1.9.12 & 1.10-RC2 at USD100 for ? site(s) & 2 years updates.Do you know others? Do you have experience to share with those?--* "Important" because if osTicket if perfect for technical websites, the interface is more and more important for marketing/commercial oriented websites these days... I have two websites in this situation, where I had to update their look n' feel because my users and partners called my previous ones : "The old-school geek's sites" LOL--EDIT : Oh! and I'm using osTicket 1.9.14 (the last stable release) for my current public sites and no one (DMT & Awesome) talks about this version. What's the stability of the 1.10-RC2 ? I don't want to take any risk in my production sites (on the other ones, no problem, but not for the commercial ones).

There's this website http://themedost.com/ that claims they have a themed option for osTicket 1.9.14. I am not sure if the Admin/Agent panel is themed though.

Thanks, phosho, I can't just now but I'll visit this link asap for sure.

Acording to there website, the admin section is not themed

Yes, I saw afterward (when I effectively visited), they state it clearly : "The customisation is limitd to the front end of the theme. The backend ( scp ) section is not included in the customisation".

5 days later

Have anyone bought any of the above themes?Would love to see them in "real life use" and also hear what you might have to say about them...I'm currently using the free theme from DMT Club, but they have been very silent since the last release so I'm still left on 1.9.12 and is looking for another option that is more reliable when it comes to future updates...

Yes, if I use one (when I'll use one), I'll be back here to share my experience of course... But for the moment, like you, I'm wondering if the staff side is really useful; it's not an answer but a reflexion. On designers side, the reason why is quite clear : it's far more of work and difficulties to provide both sides... Maybe the good path would be that the osTicket's team handles the subject and -- why not? -- takes and official partnership with one of the existing theme designers. Just to go forward ! osTicket is a super tickets system inside, but we are in a world which often considers the cosmetic only, the system as it looks from outside in the online landscape ;s

Yes I agree with you her, and for my side of things: I'm total fine with just having the client side styled, me and the others can live with the default admin style atm.As you say a partnership with, i.e, one of the above designers, would make life much easier for everyone And it would also provide some sort of quality ensurens for that said designers themes.

Making osTicket theme-able is one of the features that the devs have said is coming.  I have no idea when that will be though.

2 months later

I am quite surprised that the devs never made this more theme friendly before. Practically every other script - both support systems and not - allow easy customisation and/or a theme marketplace, or at least - with respect - a bit more "vibrant" (and responsive or has a mobile version) default theme, like MyBB forum software.I hope it comes soon... I would even pay for for it and at least support the core developers rather than spending $40 - 120 elsewhere because I lack the knowledge to customise it in the files myself

My understanding is that this is still planned for 2.0.  No there is no release date for that.

a year later

solution its that olders download must be shared, upload to the github and then collaborate to made own community based..if any have some material upload and share it, all the GPL pre-made material are usefully to novices to start, cos i clarelly see that firts releases was GPL and must remain

    This is an old thread, but I would like to use it to update anyone who is interested in what is going on with osTicket Awesome.I am just about to release the latest version for 1.10.1, which can be test-driven here:STAFF: https://osticketawesome.com/1.10.1/scpCLIENT: https://osticketawesome.com/1.10.1osTicket Awesome is the ONLY osTicket theme (that I am aware of) that is themed on BOTH the staff and client sides.In fact, it utilizes a fully responsive design throughout. Please visit the demos on a desktop/laptop AND a mobile device.This latest release has been redesigned from scratch. It has been streamlined to allow for quicker updates in the future. It now uses up to 1200px of desktop screen real estate (osTicket native only uses 960px). osTicket Awesome also shrinks down to accommodate mobile screens as tiny as 325px wide (while osTicket native defiantly remains at 960px). That means it will even look great on your mom's iPhone 4.I won't go on and on here about all of the advantages of using osTicket Awesome as anyone who is interested can go to the website to learn more.But I will mention the latest feature that I am the most stoked to share... color themes.blankThis project has been in development for years, with untold hundreds and hundreds of hours to get to this point. I am stoked that the osTicket developers have the idea of a responsive, themable design on their roadmap. But finding myself far down that road, I can tell you that you should not hold your breath until they get there.And BTW, the OP mentioned that osTicket is $100US + VAT, which remains true. But those in the UK should be aware that my payment processor will refund the VAT upon request.Enough from me... Happy New Year everyone! Stevland AmbroseLead Developerwww.osticketawesome.com

    Nice! Bookmarked for a deeper consideration when I'll have time... And when your release will be avail...NB: You have a typo on your homepage, in bottom left pop-up: "If you purchase osTikcet Awesome now, you'll get the new version as soon as it is available." (word "osTicket") :)

    Thanks for the head's up on that typo.

    BTW the osTicket Awesome releases for 1.10 and 1.10.1 are now available. Thank you for your interest.

    www.osticketawesome.com

    9 days later

    Hey 0xFF,I revisited this thread just now and thought it may be interesting to expand upon what you said regarding the staff side:>On designers side, the reason why is quite clear : it's far more of work and difficulties to provide both sidesActually, you are more correct than you may realize! It's not that creating a theme for both sides is twice as much work or even 3x as much work... osTicket's code base is very difficult to work with, and I would estimate that themeing the staff side is at least 10x as much work as the client side. I assume that is why (to my knowledge) no one has attempted it before.>I'm wondering if the staff side is really useful; it's not an answer but a reflexionIt is interesting for me to encounter this perspective. When I started using osTicket 1.7, it quickly became the center of my business. It improved my workflow in more ways than I could have predicted, but I found it painful to look at. I started tweaking the layout for my own internal use... I never had any intention of developing a commercial product. And, actually, my entire focus was the on the Staff side. I found myself having multiple editing sessions, sometimes for hours at a time. I was so invested in my own tweaks that I didn't upgrade my osTicket until 1.9, and at that point I would often spend an entire day editing to try and make everything "just right".At some point I thought to myself, "I have put hundreds of hours into this. It's too bad that no one (outside of my small business) is ever going to use it". At that moment I heard the echo of something a Unix guru / friend had said to me years earlier, "You can take an open source project and turn it into a commercial product". I think he used Apple's OS X as an example. I wasn't even aware at that point that other osTicket themes existed. But when I saw their price point and —comparatively — how little effort had gone into them, I decided to go down that path.Obviously, there is a huge difference between designing something for one's own use vs. designing the same thing for the masses. The first step was to comb through my own code and divorce myself from it. And I also decided to begin to working on responsiveness.And it was at at this juncture that I began to work on the Client side. Truthfully, I have yet to use the Client side for my own business. I have always intended to, and I still do. But clearly my relationship with osTicket evolved into much more of a distraction than I ever expected. So that's my story. Not only is osTicket Awesome the only theme (at this point) that addresses the Staff side, its initial focus was entirely on the Staff side. If the argument were made that the Client side is the public-facing part of osTicket that represents one's organization and thus the most important to improve, I could counter by saying, "Good point. But in most scenarios the Client side gets little use compared to the Staff side. Your clients log in, open or review a ticket and then they're gone. Whereas the Staff side is monitored and used all day, every day."But now you have made me curious. Perhaps I'll start a survey on www.osticketawesome.com and ask people which side is more important to them. 

    My "responsive theme" is a few jquery hacks for staff.. hardly seemed worth releasing because it was so simple. I assumed everyone else was doing that too. 

    It sounds like you're conflating the words "responsive" and "theme".  In any event, good on ya. I'd love to see your what you've come up with!

    Your analysis is interesting, stevland and no doubt you're a passionated person... Nevertheless, I'm always surprised to see that design (even if theming involves coding, it's not as heavy as it is in core development) is priced higher than underlying material. I'm software author since 30 years (eg. ffh-lab.com) and I have more and more the impression that we're going more and more to a world where the engine room is negiligible and the color of the paint and the size of the bumper are of prime importance!Take a look here: dedeecation.com. Dedee is the only one Win/Mac software for ebook signing on earth. It's around 60,000 lines of original C/C++ code, two years of full time dev (one man) to reach the first public 1.0 release... And it's currently $8 (has been $40). Another example: shopifight.com. Alify (name of the software) is close to the same size with less of innovation but a higher level of complexity. It's $111, while marketers around me are selling courses and trainings in the field Alify is targetting (ie. e-commerce) at prices like $1,000 to $3,000 for 10 to 30 hours of videos stored in a back office...For me, even if you put passion and effort (again, no doubt about this), your theme is too pricey (even if psychologically in accordance with this showcase world).