OpenRegister is what turns an office suite into a workspace. Every Nextcloud app on the install can read and write the same registers, and every register surfaces what lives in those apps. The integration runs on three levels at once: sidebar tabs that show linked records, dashboard widgets on every user's home screen, and a shared service layer that lets one app call another's data without anyone copy-pasting between tabs.
Every object in a register gets an auto-created folder. Drop files into it, write notes against the record, tag rows from the same workspace taxonomy your files use. Add a mail to a project and your colleagues see it without anyone forwarding. When someone shares one of those files in Nextcloud, the share is visible on the record. The case file is part of the workspace, not a parallel storage to keep in sync.
See the integration guidePipelinQ leans on the Nextcloud contacts and calendar your team already maintains. Adding a deal does not duplicate the customer record, and booking a meeting goes straight into the salesperson's own calendar. No vendor lock-in on the people graph.
The wiki, decisions, and meetings for a project all hang off the same register row. xWiki pages, DeciDesk decisions, and meeting notes show up in the right-hand sidebar of every record so the team reads the project from one place.
Right-click a message in Nextcloud Talk and turn it into a PipelinQ lead, a Procest case, or a DocuDesk request. The Talk conversation stays linked to the new record so the context is one click away.
OpenConnector bridges to legacy systems, REST APIs, SOAP endpoints, file drops, and message queues. The remote data flows into the same registers, the same folders, the same sidebar. Users do not learn a second interface to reach the third-party world.