243 applications
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Apprise-API

One REST call, 130+ notification services: Apprise API wraps the well-known Apprise library in a lightweight Django/Gunicorn microservice, so "send an alert" works the same whether it goes to Slack, Discord, Telegram, Teams, email, SMS, Pushover, or PagerDuty - each addressed by a simple URL scheme. It solves the credential-sprawl problem cleanly: instead of embedding provider tokens in every app, cron job, and CI pipeline, you centralize them here and everything else just POSTs a body and title. Two modes cover every workflow. Stateless calls to /notify carry target URLs in the payload (or fall back to a default set via APPRISE_STATELESS_URLS); stateful mode stores named configurations server-side under keys, so /notify/{KEY} fans out to everything registered - with tag-based routing (comma for OR, space for AND) selecting which endpoints fire per message. Messages take info, success, warning, or failure types in text, Markdown, or HTML, with attachments up to a configurable size. A built-in web UI manages and tests configurations, APPRISE_CONFIG_LOCK makes the store read-only, service allow/deny lists restrict which schemes work, webhook remapping adapts third-party payloads, and a Prometheus /metrics endpoint watches the gateway itself.

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Papercups

Companies with privacy and security concerns about piping customer conversations through Intercom or Zendesk run Papercups - open-source live customer chat. The stack is a deliberate strength: an Elixir/Phoenix API over PostgreSQL, with real-time messaging powered by Phoenix Channels and Presence - the same BEAM foundation trusted by Discord and PagerDuty for fault-tolerant, low-latency messaging. Customers see a customizable chat widget that embeds in any site as an HTML snippet, a React component, or even inside React Native apps, with configurable colors, greetings, and away messages. Your team sees a dashboard for managing conversations - close, assign, and prioritize - with Markdown and emoji in replies. The killer workflow is the reply-channel integration: connect Slack or Mattermost and every customer conversation becomes a synced thread your team answers without leaving the tool they already live in, with two-way message syncing handled by webhooks. Email and SMS channels extend intake beyond the widget, an analytics dashboard tracks communication patterns, and the Storytime feature adds real-time screen sharing to watch users navigate while you help them. A documented API supports fully custom chat UIs in Svelte, Flutter, or Vue. MIT-licensed and GDPR-conscious - customer data stays in your PostgreSQL.

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Whiteboard

The drawing surface inside WebRTC conference tools like Meetzi and the LAMS online-learning platform is Whiteboard (by cracker0dks) - a lightweight Node.js collaborative sketchboard built to be embedded and customized, which also slots into Nextcloud via the External Sites app. Everyone opening the same whiteboardid URL parameter draws on the same board, with remote user cursors visible live, per-user undo/redo, and an indicator showing the smallest participating screen so nobody draws outside a colleague's view. Content handling goes beyond pen strokes: drag-and-drop or paste images and PDFs from any PC or browser, then resize, rotate, and draw over them on canvas or background; add text and sticky notes; hold Shift for angle-snapped lines and perfect squares. Every function has a keybinding - deliberately friendly to pen displays like Wacom and XP-Pen whose hardware buttons map to shortcuts. Boards save to image or JSON (with reload), export directly to Nextcloud via WebDAV, and persist across restarts with the file-database option. A REST API with bundled interactive docs allows full programmatic control, an optional access token locks down uploads, and YAML configuration tunes behavior and performance. MIT-licensed and reverse-proxy friendly.

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HumHub

Workplace and Yammer's pattern on your own server, with GDPR compliance by construction rather than contract: HumHub is an open-source enterprise social network from Germany. Built in PHP on Yii2, it organizes everything around four concepts. Users get rich profiles with follows and interactions. Spaces are the structural unit - rooms for departments, projects, events, or clubs, with per-Space permissions, notification settings, and email summaries, and operators can auto-map users into the right Spaces. Content covers posts, wiki pages, photos and video, events, and tasks, with multi-level comments, versioning, archiving, moderation reporting, and filterable full-text search across everything. Modules make it a platform: roughly 80 install-and-activate extensions including Calendar, Wiki, Polls, Tasks, Gallery, News, direct-message Mail, OnlyOffice document editing, Advanced LDAP, SAML and JWT SSO, a RESTful API, mass user import, Translation Manager, and a Theme Builder with custom pages - every one optional and toggleable at runtime. That module economy is why HumHub serves such varied deployments: corporate intranets, city governments, universities, political parties, and nonprofits all configure the same core differently. Requirements are a plain LAMP stack - PHP 8.1+ and MySQL/MariaDB - making it one of the easiest community platforms to operate long-term.

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KeeWeb

Your KeePass vaults, opened from any browser: KeeWeb reads, edits, and creates standard KDBX files, so it works with the same databases as KeePass and KeePassXC without conversion or lock-in. Self-hosting the web app gives you a password manager reachable from any modern browser, including mobile, with no client installation and no third-party cloud in the loop. All KDBX cryptography runs client-side; the server just serves the static app. Open multiple vault files simultaneously and search them all from one box, with advanced options covering specific fields, password history, and regular expressions. Vaults load from local files, your own server (WebDAV), or Dropbox, Google Drive, and OneDrive, with automatic sync - and files are cached for offline use, so a dropped connection never locks you out; changes resync once you're back online. Day-to-day niceties include a configurable password generator, protected fields that stay masked and are held in memory more defensively, entry history, tags with easy input, drag-and-drop attachments, and per-entry icons with favicon fetching. The optional KeeWeb Connect extension (Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Safari) autofills credentials using the keepassxc-protocol. MIT-licensed with matching desktop apps for macOS, Windows, and Linux.

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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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Freshrss

Where Miniflux strips reading down, FreshRSS gives you knobs - the feature-rich pole of self-hosted RSS, comfortable with thousands of feeds. It's a multi-user PHP aggregator (host family and friends on one instance, with an anonymous reading mode) with the reading workflow refined over a decade: favorites, custom tags, powerful filter and search queries, three reading views, and statistics that reveal each site's publishing frequency - useful for pruning subscriptions. Two properties make it the standard choice. First, the Google Reader-compatible API (plus a Fever API) syncs with virtually every serious RSS client - Reeder, NetNewsWire, ReadYou, FeedMe, Fluent Reader - so your phone reads from your server. Second, native WebSub support means compatible sources (WordPress, Blogger, Medium, Friendica) push new articles instantly instead of waiting for polling. A 50+ extension ecosystem adds what truncated feeds omit - full-text content fetching, reading-time estimates, trending views, auto-unsubscribe for dead feeds - alongside community themes and custom CSS. OPML import/export keeps subscriptions portable, a CLI handles administration, and article sharing posts to many services. AGPL-licensed, running on SQLite, MySQL, or PostgreSQL. Feedly Pro's feature set, minus Feedly's subscription and its algorithms.

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ChatChat

One clean interface in front of Anthropic, OpenAI, Google Gemini, Cohere, and more: Chat Chat is a Next.js front door to the major AI providers, ending the juggling of separate subscriptions, tabs, and UIs per model. Bring your own API keys, pick a provider and model per conversation, and switch between them as the task demands: Claude for long-form reasoning, GPT for code, Gemini for multimodal work - the interface stays identical. Beyond configured presets, custom providers plug in with their own API endpoints and keys, which covers OpenAI-compatible gateways and local inference servers. The design splits into two dedicated modes: a chat interface for conversational work with customizable system prompts, and a search interface that pairs AI processing with query handling for research-style questions. The stack is modern and hackable - Next.js 14, Tailwind CSS, shadcn/ui on Radix primitives, Jotai for state - with full internationalization including English, Chinese, and Japanese. Self-hosting means your conversation history and API keys live on your instance rather than a third-party wrapper service, and pay-per-token API pricing typically beats stacking multiple monthly chat subscriptions. AGPL-licensed and deliberately simple to deploy: one container, environment variables for keys, done.

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Aptabase

Web analytics tools ignore native mobile, desktop, and game apps; Aptabase was built for exactly those. If Firebase Analytics would force a privacy-policy footnote you don't want to write, this is the alternative - session-based metrics with no cookies, no IDFA or GAID, no device fingerprinting, and a daily-rotated salt that makes cross-day re-identification mathematically impossible. That design means GDPR, CCPA, and PECR compliance out of the box and "Data Not Collected" App Store privacy labels without ATT prompts. The SDK coverage is the widest in its category: eleven first-party libraries spanning Swift, Kotlin, Flutter, React Native, Tauri, Electron, .NET MAUI, NativeScript, Unity, Unreal Engine, and JavaScript for web - each MIT-licensed, following platform conventions, and accepting a custom host parameter that points at your instance. Integration is minutes: initialize with an app key, call trackEvent with optional properties, and the dashboard shows sessions, events, app versions, OS breakdowns, and country-level geography. The self-hosted stack is a .NET server over PostgreSQL for metadata and ClickHouse for high-volume event ingestion, giving cloud-parity features under an AGPL license. For indie iOS/Android apps, Electron and Tauri tools, and Unity or Unreal games, it replaces Firebase without the Google entanglement.

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Tautulli

Plex's own dashboard shows current streams and forgets everything else - which is why every Plex server admin eventually installs Tautulli, the analytics layer. This Python web application (descended from PlexWatch and Headphones) logs complete watch history - what was watched, who watched it, when, where, from which device and IP, and whether it played directly or transcoded - and turns it into clean Highcharts graphs of daily plays, concurrent streams, bandwidth, and platform breakdowns. The home page surfaces top statistics over configurable windows: most-watched content, most active users, stream type ratios. For running a server shared with family and friends, this is operational truth: spot the user forcing 4K transcodes on a phone, see which libraries earn their disk space, and track sync activity across users. The notification engine triggers on server events - playback starts, transcode decision changes, recently added media, server down - through dozens of agents (Discord, Telegram, Slack, email, webhooks) with fully customizable text and conditions, plus arbitrary script execution. Scheduled newsletters email your users a styled digest of recently added content. A comprehensive API exposes every statistic for dashboards like Homarr, and an official mobile app monitors activity on the go. Themed to match Plex/Web. GPL-licensed.

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Thumbor

Born at Brazilian media giant Globo.com, Thumbor answers imaging CDNs like Imgix and Cloudinary with an HTTP service where every image variant is just a URL. Ask for /300x200/smart/your-image.jpg and Thumbor fetches the original, crops and resizes on demand, and caches the result - one source file, unlimited renditions, no batch pre-generation pipeline. The "smart" in the URL is the signature feature: OpenCV-based face detection finds people in the frame and crops around them (no more thumbnails with severed heads), and when no faces exist, feature detection finds visually important corners and computes a weighted center of mass as the focal point. Beyond cropping, a chainable filter pipeline handles brightness, contrast, grayscale, blur, red-eye removal, rounded corners, rotation, watermarks, and format conversion with quality control - applied in order via URL segments. All common image formats work out of the box, and every layer is pluggable: loaders (HTTP, local, S3), storages and result storages (local, S3, Ceph, and community backends), engines, optimizers, filters, and even custom detectors, with the awesome-thumbor list cataloging the ecosystem. URL signing prevents abuse of your processing capacity. Integrations exist for Django, Rails, Node, WordPress, and most frameworks. MIT-licensed, battle- tested for over a decade.

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Quant-UX

Most design tools stop at prototyping; Quant-UX also measures how real users actually perform with the prototype. The visual editor creates prototypes that behave like real apps - functional input widgets, animations, form validation, data binding across screens, and business logic modeled with REST requests and decision elements. Design systems are first-class, with components, design tokens, and master screens; if you design elsewhere, drop in image files or import from Figma. Testing is a shared link or QR code - no installs on the tester's side. Define user tasks up front, and Quant-UX records every session: click heatmaps show where users found (or missed) actionable elements, user journey graphs expose lost users, drop-off charts reveal where tasks stall, and success rates and task KPIs are extracted automatically into a dashboard. An A/B test operator wires two design variants into one prototype and compares task duration, success rate, and interaction counts. In-prototype surveys collect qualitative feedback alongside the numbers, and an AI assistant generates prototype fragments like styled forms on request. The RepoCloud deployment runs the full stack - frontend, backend, and WebSocket server containers over MongoDB - so all test recordings and research data stay on your infrastructure.

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BeaverHabits

No targets, no gamification spiral, no motivational nagging: Beaver Habit Tracker is a self-hosted habit tracker deliberately built without "Goals". The core loop is honest: add habits, check them off each day, watch streaks accumulate on a calendar view. Its design follows behavioral-science basics - make it obvious (visual streak cues), make it attractive (progress is the motivator), make it satisfying (tracking becomes its own reward). Beyond the daily checklist it supports per-day notes intelligently grouped per habit, periodic habits, habit categories and tags, drag-to-reorder (manual or automatic), dark mode, and detailed streak and frequency views. Data lives where you choose: a single SQLite database or flat JSON files on a mounted volume, with JSON export and import for full portability. A REST API opens automation - community integrations already cover Stream Deck buttons, Home Assistant triggers, and CalDAV. The Python app ships as one Docker container with no external dependencies; environment variables tune everything from first day of week and index-page columns to iOS standalone PWA mode, and single-user setups can bypass the login entirely with TRUSTED_LOCAL_EMAIL. BSD-3-Clause licensed with no commercial restrictions - a well-executed single-purpose tool whose mobile PWA works anywhere a browser does.

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Octobox

What Gmail did for email, Octobox does for GitHub notifications: an ephemeral, unmanageable stream becomes an inbox you can actually triage. GitHub marks notifications read the moment you glance at them and lets old ones vanish days later; heavy maintainers end up building elaborate Gmail filter systems just to cope. Octobox - a Ruby on Rails app over PostgreSQL - syncs your notifications into a persistent inbox with an explicit archived state: mark a thread done, and if the issue or PR sees new activity, it pops back automatically, so nothing silently falls through. Triage is keyboard-driven with Gmail-style shortcuts (j/k to navigate, e to archive, m to mute, s to star), and multi-select clears noisy repositories in bulk. Filtering is where it earns its keep: slice by repository, organization, type, action, state, reason, CI status, labels, author, assignee, or bot origin, combine prefix search filters, and pin favorite searches to the sidebar. The optional GitHub App enriches entries with live PR/CI status and labels so you can decide without clicking through. Auto-archive rules clear merged PRs and closed issues; muting and snoozing silence the rest. A REST API supports integrations. Self-hosting keeps your notification metadata - a map of everything you work on - on your own server.

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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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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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Astuto

Feature requests, bug reports, upvotes, and a public roadmap: Astuto (Ruby on Rails backend, React frontend) gives users a Canny-style feedback portal so product decisions rest on visible demand rather than the loudest voice in the room. Feedback organizes into as many boards as you want (features, bugs, integrations), each post carrying a custom status you define - "planned," "in progress," "shipped," or whatever matches your process - and those statuses feed a public roadmap view showing users what is actually being worked on. Participation friction is adjustable at both ends: sign-in works with plain email or any OAuth2 provider, anonymous feedback can be enabled for unregistered users, and a moderation queue lets you approve posts before they appear when spam is a concern. Integration hooks are practical rather than sprawling - webhooks fire on events to connect Jira, Trello, or Slack, and a REST API manages the whole feedback space programmatically. Brand customization, an invitation system, private-site settings, and recap emails for administrators complete a deliberately minimal tool: it collects, organizes, and prioritizes feedback well, for free, forever.

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Documize

Enterprise documentation discipline without enterprise infrastructure: Documize Community is the Confluence alternative built on exactly that trade. The entire platform - Go backend, Ember.js frontend - compiles to a single executable binary for Linux, Windows, and macOS with zero runtime dependencies: no Elasticsearch, no Redis, no JVM. Point it at PostgreSQL, MySQL, MariaDB, Percona, or Microsoft SQL Server (rare in open source, decisive in Microsoft shops), and schema migrations run on launch with native full-text search on whichever engine you chose. Content organization rejects nested-folder sprawl for Spaces, categories, and labels, and the section-based composable editor mixes rich text, Markdown, code blocks, PDFs, diagrams, and embedded Jira or Trello content in one document, with reusable blocks and templates so teams start from standards rather than blank pages. It deliberately unifies internal team docs and customer-facing documentation in one system with granular space-, document-, and action-level permissions deciding who sees what. Where wikis stop, Documize continues: content approval workflows (draft, review, approve, publish), version management, lifecycle control, feedback capture, PDF export, analytics showing what gets read and ignored, activity streams, and audit logs. Keycloak, LDAP, and SSO integrate for enterprise auth. AGPL-licensed.

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