243 applications
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Lingva Translate

What Nitter was to Twitter and Invidious is to YouTube, Lingva Translate is to Google Translate: a privacy front-end delivering the service's full capability while cutting Google out of the loop between you and your text. Built on Next.js with TypeScript and Chakra UI, it uses the purpose-built Lingva Scraper to fetch translations from Google Translate without your browser ever touching a Google-related service - no cookies, no tracking, no account, while retaining what makes Google Translate hard to give up: 100+ languages with the translation quality of Google's production models, unlike offline engines that trade privacy for accuracy. The clean interface covers automatic source-language detection, text-to-speech audio playback for pronunciations, definitions and examples, and light/dark themes. For developers, every instance doubles as a translation API: a RESTful endpoint at /api/v1/:source/:target/:query returns JSON translations, an audio endpoint serves TTS buffers, and a full GraphQL API at /api/graphql exposes translations, audio, and language lists for richer integrations - all unmetered on your own instance. Deployment is a single stateless container with one environment variable for the site domain; defaults for theme and language pair are configurable. GPL-licensed, and popular as the translation backend for privacy-respecting apps.

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The Lounge

"Forget about bouncers" became a real sentence because of The Lounge: a Node.js web IRC client that holds persistent connections to your networks 24/7, logging everything while you sleep, so closing the browser tab never means missing a message or losing your place in a channel. Open it again from any device - desktop, phone, tablet - and you resume exactly where you left off, with full history synchronized. Because it combines bouncer and client in one process, the experience feels like a modern chat app rather than 1990s infrastructure: push notifications for highlights and private messages (with self-generated VAPID keys, so even Web Push needs no third-party service), automatic link previews, inline file and image uploads, and full IRCv3 protocol support. It installs as a progressive web app from any modern browser, so phones get a native-feel client without an app store. Multi-user support means one instance serves your whole team or community, each user with their own networks and history, and LDAP integration ties into existing authentication. A public mode alternatively serves as an open, registration-free web chat for events or support channels. MIT-licensed, born as a fork of Shout, and a fixture of self-hosting stacks since.

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NodeBB

Forum software rebuilt on the modern web stack: NodeBB runs the classic bulletin-board format - categories, threads, local accounts - in real time, on Node.js over MongoDB, Redis, or PostgreSQL. WebSockets stream new posts into open topics as they're written and deliver instant notifications for follows, likes, and subscriptions; built-in chat supports side-by-side private conversations. The headline of recent versions is core ActivityPub federation: your forum can follow, share, and converse with other NodeBB instances, Mastodon, Lemmy, and anything else that speaks the protocol, turning an isolated community into a fediverse node. Everything beyond the common core is a plugin - more than 500 plugins and themes install in one click from the admin panel, covering SSO providers, search backends like Elasticsearch and Solr, galleries, calendars, and more. The theming engine extends base templates with SCSS/CSS on Bootstrap 5, plus a drag-and-drop widget system and custom HTML/CSS/JS injection. Operators get a real-time analytics dashboard, human-readable SEO-friendly URLs with semantic markup, multilingual UI, and full read and write REST APIs for integration. Mobile-first rendering means the same install works everywhere. For communities that outgrew phpBB but don't want Discourse's weight, NodeBB is the natural middle.

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Nametag

CRM mechanics applied to your actual relationships instead of a sales pipeline: Nametag is a Personal Relationship Manager (PRM). It exists to fix the things you keep forgetting: when you last talked to an old friend, their kids' names, the birthday you missed twice. Contacts are tracked with flexible attributes - names, birthdays, important dates, and free-form notes for everything else - and organized into custom groups. Where it goes beyond a contacts app is relationship mapping: you define how people connect to each other (family, friends, colleagues, or custom relationship types), and an interactive D3.js-powered graph renders your entire personal network so you can see clusters and connections at a glance. Staying in touch is automated: scheduled reminders fire for birthdays, important dates, and reach-out nudges, with optional email delivery via a Resend API key for password resets and reminder notifications. Built with Next.js, it is mobile-responsive, ships with full dark mode, and supports multiple languages including English and Spanish. Because it is self-hosted, there are no account tiers or contact limits - unlimited people and relationships, with every note about your personal life stored on your own server rather than a social-graph company's cloud. A lightweight, single-container deployment makes it one of the easiest personal tools to run.

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ByteStash

The functions, config files, and one-liners you keep re-deriving finally get a searchable home: ByteStash is a self-hosted code snippet manager - a private Gist. Each snippet holds multiple code fragments, so a Docker Compose file, its .env template, and a plaintext usage note live together under one titled, categorized entry. Monaco-based syntax highlighting covers dozens of languages, from Python, TypeScript, Go, and Rust to YAML, Dockerfiles, Terraform, and Markdown. Retrieval is the point: filter by language or category, search titles and descriptions, and optionally include snippet contents in full-text search. Snippets can be pinned for quick access and shared via public links that recipients open without an account. Multi-user support runs on JWT authentication with optional OIDC single sign-on for teams on centralized identity, and a full CRUD REST API with Swagger documentation wires snippet retrieval into editors, scripts, and CI pipelines. Storage is a single SQLite database with optional encryption, and collections export as JSON or Markdown. A React frontend on a Node.js backend, deployed as one lightweight container.

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MediKeep

Your medical history, fragmented across a dozen patient portals, in one place on your server: MediKeep (formerly Personal Medical Records Keeper) is a self-hosted health record system. Built with a React frontend and FastAPI backend over PostgreSQL, it organizes 14 categories of medical data - medications with dosages and schedules, conditions, procedures, allergies, immunizations, symptoms, injuries, doctor visits and encounters, treatments, lab results, and even medical equipment with service dates and supplier info. Treatment management is genuinely sophisticated: an advanced mode links treatments to their medications with per-medication overrides for prescriber, pharmacy, and effective dates, and reverse lookup shows which treatments use a given medication. A dashboard summarizes records and recent activity, file uploads attach documents to records, and tagging works across categories. When a new specialist asks for your history, the report builder assembles custom reports by category and exports to PDF, JSON, or CSV - a curated, portable summary instead of a folder of photocopies. Authentication supports Google and GitHub SSO with OIDC providers like Keycloak and Authelia expected to work, and the built-in backup system protects the archive. Health data is exactly what should never live in someone else's cloud.

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phpMyAdmin

Since 1998, phpMyAdmin has been the standard web interface for MySQL and MariaDB - the tool millions of developers, DBAs, and hosting companies reach for when a database needs inspecting, fixing, or migrating. Written in PHP, it covers effectively the entire administration surface: create, browse, alter, and drop databases, tables, views, columns, and indexes; insert and edit rows through a tabular editor; manage user accounts and granular privileges; and maintain stored procedures, triggers, and events - all without touching a command line. The SQL editor executes arbitrary queries with syntax highlighting, autocompletion, history, and bookmarkable statements, including batch queries. Import/export is a migration workhorse: read SQL, CSV, XML, and OpenDocument spreadsheets in; write out to SQL dumps, CSV, JSON, XML, PDF, Word, LaTeX, and more - the fastest path for moving a WordPress database or handing a schema to a colleague. The Designer view renders your schema as an interactive ER diagram with drag-and-drop relationship editing, and data transformations display BLOBs as images or download links inline. Server maintenance views surface configuration suggestions. Multi-server support, dark mode, and translations into 72 languages round out a tool that earns its ubiquity. GPL-licensed.

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Restreamer

Point OBS or a hardware encoder at Restreamer's built-in RTMP or SRT ingest and it serves your website while rebroadcasting to YouTube Live, Twitch, Facebook, Vimeo, TikTok, LinkedIn, PeerTube, and anything else that accepts RTMP, SRT, or HLS - a complete self-hosted live-streaming server from datarhei. That multistreaming normally costs a monthly Restream.io subscription; here it's one FFmpeg process per destination on your own hardware. The web UI is genuinely approachable, with a wizard that walks beginners through camera setup, while professionals get the full surface: multiple audio/video inputs (USB, RTSP network cameras, virtual devices), codec and processing settings, separate audio muxing, and hardware acceleration via Nvidia CUDA, Intel VAAPI, or Raspberry Pi. Serving your own audience is first-class - a built-in Video.js player embeds in your site, a ready-made publication website streams without any embedding work, HLS chunk sizes are tunable, and automatic Let's Encrypt handles HTTPS. Viewer and bandwidth monitoring with limits keeps traffic costs predictable, and it's GDPR-friendly: no third-party provider, no audience data stored. A fully Swagger-documented REST API drives automation. SRT support keeps latency under a second.

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Jirafeau

Upload a file, get a unique download link and a separate delete link - Jirafeau has done exactly this one thing since 2008. It is plain PHP with no database, no mail server, no JavaScript framework, and no external dependencies - files and metadata live on the filesystem, which is why it runs on nearly anything and why it has outlasted most of its imitators. Uploads use the HTML5 file API, so PHP's post_max_size ceiling does not constrain file size, with live progress showing speed, percentage, and time remaining. Every upload takes options: expiration from one minute to a year to unlimited, self-destruct after first download, and password protection with configurable policy - passwords can be optional, required, or server-generated with complexity rules. Server-side encryption (modern builds use XChaCha20-Poly1305) stores files encrypted at rest with the decrypt key embedded only in the download URL, never on the server, so a compromised host cannot read the contents. Unencrypted deployments get file-level deduplication - identical files stored once with multiple links. Upload access can be gated by password lists or IP allowlists, a small admin panel manages stored files, and a CLI cleanup script handles expired files via cron. Recipients can preview supported files in-browser.

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Papermerge

Receipts, contracts, and letters that arrive as pixels rather than text: Papermerge is a document management system built specifically for scanned documents. Upload a PDF, TIFF, JPEG, or PNG and OCR runs automatically, with a real-time status indicator beside the document title; under the hood it drives OCRmyPDF and Tesseract, supporting 130+ languages and producing a new document version with a selectable, searchable text layer you can download. Full-text search runs across everything, with multiple search-engine backends (Xapian by default). The interface deliberately mimics a modern desktop file browser: dual-panel commander, drag and drop, hierarchical folders, and colored tags on documents and folders. Page management fixes what scanners get wrong - delete blank pages, rotate, reorder, merge, extract, and move strayed pages between documents, powered by PikePDF. Document types act as categories, each with its own custom metadata fields, so invoices carry vendor and amount while contracts carry parties and dates. Versioning preserves every state of a document. Multi-user support includes groups, group ownership, permission management, and document/folder sharing between users and groups, and an OpenAPI-compliant REST API automates ingestion from scanners or scripts. Apache-licensed, ideal for long-term digital archives.

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Corteza

Salesforce's platform model, 100% open-source (Apache 2.0): Corteza is a Go/Vue.js low-code platform developed under a foundation, so there is no open-core bait to grow out of. The heart is Corteza Compose: namespaces contain applications, modules define record structures the way Salesforce objects do, and a drag-and-drop page builder assembles record pages, list pages, dashboards, and charts from configurable blocks. Automation comes from a visual, BPMN-style workflow engine plus JavaScript automation scripts, so cross-application business logic - approval chains, field updates, notifications - is configured rather than programmed. Granular role-based permissions reach down to individual modules, fields, and records, mirroring real organizational hierarchies. Corteza CRM ships as the flagship application built entirely on Compose: leads, accounts, opportunities, campaigns, and cases with a 360-degree customer view, covering most Salesforce standard objects - and because it is just a Compose app, adding or reshaping modules is configuration, not a fork. Everything is reachable over REST APIs, deliberately familiar tooling eases Salesforce admin migration, and a CLI can even generate synthetic records for load-testing what you build.

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Homer

"Dead simple static HOMepage for your servER" - Homer's name is the spec. It is a fully static HTML/JS dashboard driven by one YAML file (assets/config.yml): list your services in groups with names, icons, tags, and URLs, and Homer renders a clean, fast landing page for everything you self-host. Because there is no backend, no database, and nothing to maintain, the container is tiny and effectively zero-maintenance - the entire operational surface is a text file you can version-control alongside your infrastructure. Despite the minimalism, the feature set is genuinely useful: smart cards add live data to service tiles via a type key - Pi-hole block statistics, AdGuard Home status, Jellyfin activity, Gatus and Home Assistant states, and dozens more integrations, with configurable periodic refresh. Fuzzy search jumps to any service as you type, keyboard shortcuts drive navigation, and multi-page support with item grouping keeps large homelabs organized. Theming covers built-in light and dark modes plus full custom CSS, tags get color-coded styles, and the whole dashboard installs as a PWA on phones and tablets. Icons come from Font Awesome or your own images. If Dashy is the maximalist dashboard and Homarr the drag-and-drop one, Homer is the minimalist: one YAML file, instant loads, and nothing that can break at 2 a.m.

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Wakapi

Its author, a student and WakaTime fan, didn't want to pay $9/month for data about his own keystrokes - so Wakapi was born, a self-hosted, WakaTime-compatible backend for coding statistics. The compatibility is the killer design decision: the official WakaTime plugins for VS Code, JetBrains IDEs, Vim, and dozens of other editors work unmodified - just point the plugin's API URL at your Wakapi instance with your personal key, and heartbeats flow to your server instead of a third party's. Duration inference matches WakaTime's own algorithm, with a configurable timeout (10 minutes by default). From that stream Wakapi builds statistics and plots across projects, languages, editors, hosts, and operating systems, plus the fun extras: public leaderboards (optionally login-gated, with configurable aggregation windows), badges for GitHub readmes, and weekly email reports. A REST API serves your data programmatically, Prometheus export feeds your existing Grafana, and a WakaTime relay mode can mirror heartbeats to both services during migration - with one-click import of historical WakaTime data. Written in Go, it is lightning fast and light enough for the smallest instance, storing to SQLite, PostgreSQL, or MySQL, with configurable data retention for GDPR peace of mind. Deliberately smaller than WakaTime, deliberately yours.

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Peppermint

A deliberately simple ticketing system standing in for both Zendesk and Jira: Peppermint handles internal staff requests and external customer support alike. The stack is modern full-stack TypeScript: Next.js and React over Prisma and PostgreSQL, which makes it light to run and approachable for developers extending it. Ticket creation is straightforward - a markdown editor with file uploads, assignment, status tracking, and a logical workflow that new agents grasp without a manual. Mailbox integration converts email into tickets automatically: configure SMTP/IMAP per mailbox and incoming messages become trackable tickets. Each client accumulates an interaction history, giving agents context on every past request before replying. Two touches distinguish it from bare-bones ticketing: a built-in markdown notebook with todo lists for internal documentation and knowledge sharing, and OIDC authentication so agents sign in through your existing identity provider - Keycloak, Okta, Authentik, or Azure AD. Configurable webhooks and email notifications push ticket events to third-party services. The UI is responsive from mobile to 4K, and everything works fully offline in air-gapped environments. Docker-native and scalable via Kubernetes, with an active community of 3,000+ GitHub stargazers.

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Manager.io

Full double-entry accounting on your own server: Manager.io Server Edition runs the same engine as the free desktop edition as a web server, so unlimited users work in unlimited businesses concurrently, with all books on infrastructure you control. The module coverage is genuinely comprehensive - general ledger with a customizable chart of accounts, sales and purchase invoices, quotes and orders, bank and cash account reconciliation, inventory with stock tracking, fixed assets with depreciation, payroll, multi-currency with exchange gains and losses, tax codes for VAT and GST regimes, and the complete reporting stack: balance sheet, profit and loss, trial balance, aged receivables and payables, and cash flow statements. The interface is translated into more than seventy languages, reflecting a genuinely global user base. The licensing model is the refreshing part: a server license is a one-time perpetual purchase, not a subscription - twelve months of updates included, optional renewals after, no per-user tiers, no data limits, and you can downgrade to the free desktop edition anytime, so your books are never hostage. Businesses wanting collaborative accounting behind their own firewall, with data sovereignty and no monthly fees, get exactly that.

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ExpenseOwl

Log a date, amount, and category; get a clean monthly pie chart and a cashflow strip showing income, expenses, and net balance - ExpenseOwl is expense tracking stripped to what actually matters. The MIT-licensed Go application deliberately is not a budgeting system - no envelopes, no accounts, no double-entry, no bank sync - because its author found tools like Firefly III and Actual too heavy for the simple question "where did this month's money go?" The dashboard makes that question fast: click a pie slice to exclude fixed costs like rent and see discretionary spending clearly, then drill into a chronological table view to inspect or delete individual transactions. Recurring transactions handle salaries and subscriptions automatically, optional tags add a second classification axis, and settings cover custom categories, currency symbol, and a configurable month start date for non-calendar pay cycles. CSV import migrates data from virtually any other tool, and CSV export keeps your data portable. It ships as a self-contained binary and multi-architecture Docker image with zero internet interaction, stores data in flat JSON files by default (PostgreSQL optional), and installs as a PWA on phones. Single-user by design; pair it with an authenticating reverse proxy if exposed publicly.

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GoToSocial

Mastodon serves single-user and small-community instances poorly; GoToSocial, an ActivityPub server written in Go, was built precisely for them. Where Mastodon demands Ruby, PostgreSQL, Redis, and Sidekiq, GoToSocial is one binary using roughly 250-350 MiB of RAM with SQLite as the default database (PostgreSQL optional) - it runs comfortably on a $5 VPS or a repurposed laptop. The deliberate design choice is having no built-in web client: the server exposes profile pages, a settings panel, and a faithful implementation of the Mastodon API, and you post through the client app you already like - Tusky on Android, Feditext on iOS, Pinafore or Phanpy in the browser. Federation is the point: your instance follows, boosts, and replies across Mastodon, Misskey, Pixelfed, and the rest of the Fediverse, with your identity anchored to your own domain. Safety is a stated focus, with granular per-post visibility and interaction controls, content warnings, custom emoji, hashtag following, domain allow/blocklists, and OIDC login support. Built-in Let's Encrypt provisioning simplifies the mandatory TLS. AGPL-3.0 licensed and in active beta, federating cleanly with the ecosystem's major servers.

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PsiTransfer

Upload files, get a share link, let it expire: PsiTransfer is a self-hosted WeTransfer with no accounts, no logins, and no third-party cloud with size caps and metadata harvesting. The engineering focus is large files over imperfect networks. Uploads use the tus.io resumable protocol, so a dropped connection on a multi-gigabyte video resumes exactly where it stopped once you're back online; downloads support HTTP range headers for the same resilience, and everything streams, so file size is bounded by your disk rather than memory. Files organize into upload buckets with retention you control: expire after a set time (up to weeks) or after a one-time download, with automatic cleanup when links lapse. Recipients need nothing installed - they open the link, preview files in modal views, and grab everything as a zip or tar.gz archive with one click. Buckets can be password-protected (AES-encrypted download lists), and security-through-obscurity is done properly: bucket URLs use hashed UUID tokens and stored filenames are replaced with UUIDs. An optional admin page (enabled by setting an admin password) lists bucket information and storage. The Vue.js frontend ships under 100 KB gzipped and is fully responsive. Honest caveat from the author: no end-to-end payload encryption yet. BSD-licensed, Docker-ready.

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