243 applications
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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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Homarr

A single pane of glass for every service you run, arranged by drag-and-drop with no YAML or JSON files: Homarr is the modern dashboard for self-hosted infrastructure. Its grid system arranges apps, widgets, and bookmarks on desktop or touch, backed by an icon picker with over 11,000 icons. What separates Homarr from static launchers is 50+ live integrations: Plex, Jellyfin, and Emby media stats, the *arr suite (Sonarr, Radarr) with a unified release calendar, download clients, Pi-hole and AdGuard Home controls, Proxmox, Home Assistant, OPNsense, and Unifi monitoring. Widgets update in real time over WebSockets (tRPC and Redis under the hood), and a built-in search queries thousands of data points across connected services. Custom widgets extend the reach to any HTTP API without code: define endpoint, auth, and refresh interval in the management UI, then render responses as stat grids, tables, progress bars, status indicators, action buttons, or full custom JSX layouts - with an AI-prompt helper for generating templates. Multi-user support is first-class: credentials, OIDC, or LDAP sign-on, groups with granular permissions, and secrets encrypted with AES-256-CBC. A robust background-job system scales it from a Raspberry Pi homelab to deployments serving hundreds of users.

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DumbBudget

"Stupid simple software" is the entire philosophy at DumbWare.io, and DumbBudget delivers it: no over-engineering, no complexity, no accounts, no bank connections - just a clean, modern ledger for money in and money out. Log income and expenses, assign categories, and watch real-time balance calculations update as you type. Finding transactions is quick: filter by type, narrow by date range, sort by date or amount. When tax season or spreadsheet analysis calls, everything exports to CSV. Access control matches the philosophy - a single PIN (set via one environment variable) gates the app, backed by real security engineering: rate limiting on PIN attempts, temporary lockout after failures, secure session handling, and no sensitive data in browser storage. Multi-currency support covers the ISO codes, and a SITE_TITLE variable names each instance - deliberately useful, because running separate instances per account or family member is the intended pattern for multi-user needs. The responsive UI ships light and dark themes and installs as a PWA on phones, where expense logging actually happens. Configuration is five environment variables; data persists in one folder. If Actual Budget and Firefly III feel like accounting software, this is the notepad that gets used. GPL-licensed.

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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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Redmine

Nearly two decades running engineering organizations: Redmine is the veteran open-source project management and issue tracker, a Ruby on Rails application (GPLv2) still in active development. Its core strength is configurability: define your own trackers (bug, feature, task, or anything else), issue statuses, and role-based workflows that control exactly which transitions each role may perform, then extend records with custom fields of every type. Issues support subtasks, relations (blocks, precedes, duplicates), watchers, categories, and full journaled history, with saved custom queries and cross-project filtering for slicing the backlog any way you need. Around the tracker sit Gantt charts and calendars, a roadmap driven by versions, per-project wikis, forums, news, and document repositories, plus time tracking with estimated versus spent hours and activity-based reporting. Multi-project support runs deep - subprojects, per-project modules, and granular role-based permissions - and repository integration (Git, Subversion, Mercurial) links commits to issues automatically. Email notifications, inbound email-to-issue creation, LDAP authentication, a REST API, and a large plugin and theme ecosystem round it out. Recent 6.x releases brought substantial query and rendering optimizations. Self-hosting keeps your entire project history in your own database, free of per-seat licensing.

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Journiv

A Day One alternative that keeps your most personal writing on your own server: Journiv is journaling purpose-built for self-hosters. The FastAPI backend runs on SQLite by default with optional PostgreSQL, Redis, and Celery for background work, behind a clean, minimal web UI. Unlike general note-taking apps, it ships the features journaling actually needs: customizable moods and mood groups, activity tracking, goals with automated progress from logged activities, and daily writing prompts filterable by category and difficulty so a blank page never stalls you. Quick Log captures a moment in seconds and expands into a full entry later; "On This Day" resurfaces entries from past weeks, months, and years. Multiple journals separate work, gratitude, and personal writing, with tags and full-text search across everything, plus media uploads with automatic thumbnails and an Immich integration for linking photo-library memories. Analytics chart mood trends and writing patterns over time. Data portability is taken seriously: native import of Day One exports, JSON/Markdown/HTML export, and a standalone HTML viewer that opens your archive in any browser with no server running. OIDC single sign-on works with Authentik or Keycloak, and multi-arch images cover amd64 and arm64.

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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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Carbone

Document-generation code is the worst kind of code in your backlog - Carbone kills it. Its insight is separating design from data - templates are ordinary office documents (DOCX, ODT, XLSX, PPTX, HTML, even custom XML) built in LibreOffice, Microsoft Office, or Google Docs, with mustache-like markers such as {d.companyName} typed directly into the text. Send a template plus JSON from your existing APIs to the HTTP API, and Carbone returns the finished document - exported as-is or converted to PDF, XLSX, CSV, HTML, PNG, EPUB, and more via its integrated LibreOffice converter (Chromium and OnlyOffice engines are also supported for HTML-fidelity and office-format conversions). The template language goes well beyond substitution: loops over arrays render dynamic table rows, filters and aggregations run inside the document, and built-in formatters handle dates, numbers, currencies, timezones, and locales, with custom JavaScript formatters when needed. One template serves multiple languages through translation markers with auto-maintained translation files. The XML-agnostic engine means anything your document editor can design - pagination, headers, footers, nested tables, charts - survives generation intact, and Carbone guarantees no breaking changes in template syntax. Node.js-based, fast via multi-threaded LibreOffice conversion. The invoices, contracts, and reports your product owes its users become template edits, not sprints.

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Cockpit

Built by an agency in 2011 and refined by real client work since, Cockpit is a headless CMS whose pragmatism is earned. It's a pure content backend: model your data, let editors manage it, and fetch it over REST or GraphQL from any frontend - React, Vue, Flutter, a static site generator, or an IoT dashboard. Content modeling covers three shapes: Collections for repeatable items (posts, products, events), Singletons for one-off content (settings, about pages), and Trees for hierarchies (navigation, categories), all assembled from 20+ field types including relationships. The API layer is unusually capable: MongoDB-style query filtering, field selection to trim payloads, automatic image optimization through the assets API, and built-in caching. Localization is first-class with per-field multi-language content and fallback support; user management includes roles, granular permissions, two-factor authentication, and API tokens; and webhooks push changes into external workflows. Agencies get multi-tenant Spaces - several sites or clients from one installation. The operational footprint is refreshingly small: PHP plus either SQLite or MongoDB, no build steps, no toolchain, extensible through hooks, events, and addons (pages/SEO, forms, full-text search, layout components). Where enterprise headless platforms bill per seat and per locale, Cockpit is MIT-licensed and simply yours.

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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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Passbolt

Security-conscious IT departments pick Passbolt for its cryptography: every user holds an OpenPGP key pair, and shared credentials are encrypted individually to each recipient's public key - real end-to-end encryption, not a vault password handed around. All crypto runs client-side in the mandatory browser extension (distributed and signed through the Chrome and Firefox stores, deliberately separating the crypto code from the server that stores ciphertext); private keys and passphrases never touch your instance, and the server admin cannot read a single secret. Authentication uses the challenge-based GpgAuth protocol, secrets are digitally signed to verify sender integrity, and metadata encryption extends protection to resource names and URLs. Day to day it behaves like a polished commercial manager: auto-fill and auto-save in forms, strong password generation, anti-phishing protection, TOTP storage, folder hierarchies shared per-user or per-group with fine-grained permissions and instant cryptographic revocation. Native iOS, Android, and desktop apps ship alongside a JSON API, CLI, and SDKs for CI/CD secret retrieval and rotation. The PHP server runs on MariaDB and is AGPL-licensed open source - including the paid tiers' codebase - with published security audits.

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Heimdall

Links stop drowning in browser bookmarks once Heimdall - the application dashboard from the LinuxServer.io team - gives every web app and service you run a single, organized front door. Items come in three tiers. Generic items link to anything on the web with a name, color, and optional icon. Foundation apps are recognized as you type, auto-filling the application's icon and tile color so a full homelab dashboard assembles in minutes. Enhanced apps go further: supply API credentials and the tile shows live data - queue size and download speed for SABnzbd and NZBGet, plus integrations for Sonarr, Radarr, Plex, Jellyfin, Pi-hole, Portainer, Transmission, and many more. There are no iframes and no apps-within-apps; tiles are honest links with real-time stats layered on. Tiles arrange by drag and drop, backgrounds are customizable, an optional search bar (Google, Bing, or DuckDuckGo) makes it work as a browser start page, and optional multi-user authentication keeps dashboards personal. Built on Laravel with SQLite file-based storage - no external database - it stays light, responsive on mobile, and simple to back up. A natural first deployment: the page that ties every other self-hosted service together.

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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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Isso

Named from the German "Ich schrei sonst" - roughly "or I'll scream" - Isso is a lightweight Python/JavaScript commenting server, a drop-in Disqus replacement for people who noticed what Disqus does to reader privacy and page load times. The design premise is printed right in the docs: comments are not Big Data. So the backend is a single SQLite file rather than a database cluster, and the entire client is one embeddable JavaScript file - 65 kB, 20 kB gzipped - that you drop into any static site, blog, or CMS. Commenters write in Markdown, need no account, and can edit or delete their own comments within a configurable window (15 minutes by default). Spam control comes from an optional moderation queue: held comments stay invisible until you activate them via an admin interface or email notification links. Migration is a first-class feature, with importers for Disqus and WordPress exports, so years of existing threads move over intact. Because everything is server-rendered from your own instance, no third party tracks your readers, and real-world switchers report smaller pages and faster loads than the Disqus embed. MIT-licensed, running since 2012.

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mCaptcha

The CAPTCHA bargain - annoy your users and feed their behavior to Google - gets replaced with economics by mCaptcha. Instead of image puzzles, it uses SHA256 proof-of-work: every visitor's browser silently solves a small computational challenge (via a WebAssembly library) before submitting a form. Humans never notice the milliseconds; bots hammering your site must burn more compute sending requests than your server spends answering them, which makes attacks more expensive than defense - the property that also makes mCaptcha genuine DoS protection, not just bot filtering. Written in Rust, the system is fully automated: difficulty scales with traffic, so challenges stay trivial in normal conditions and harden under attack. The privacy and accessibility wins are structural rather than promised: no tracking, no profiling, no user-pattern data collection, and no visual puzzles that exclude users with visual or cognitive impairments - the design was published in Communications of the ACM. Rate limiting is IP-independent, so users behind NATs, VPNs, or Tor get the same experience instead of endless challenge loops, and proofs resist replay attacks, neutering captcha farms. Migration is deliberately easy: the API is compatible with reCAPTCHA and hCaptcha, making it a drop-in replacement. AGPL-licensed core with proprietary-friendly client libraries.

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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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Etherpad

In continuous open-source development since 2009, Etherpad is the original really-real-time collaborative editor - used by Wikimedia, governments, EU public-sector institutions, and tens of thousands of self-hosters. Its core idea is visible authorship: every keystroke is attributed with author colors, every revision preserved, and the timeslider lets you scrub through a document's entire history character by character. Multiple people type into the same pad and see each other's changes instantly - it scales to thousands of simultaneous editors per pad. The base install is deliberately lightweight; capability comes from roughly 290 plugins installable from the admin web UI: comments, images, tables, drawing, video chat via WebRTC, math rendering, code highlighting, and authentication via OAuth, LDAP, or OpenID. AI is pointedly a plugin, not a default - you choose the model and infrastructure, or never turn it on. There is no telemetry. For integrators, an HTTP API (with OpenAPI definitions at /api/openapi.json) manages pads, users, and groups for embedding in your own applications, and the ueberDB abstraction layer supports PostgreSQL, MySQL, Redis, MongoDB, and SQLite backends. Full data export is built in, the format is open, it is translated into 105 languages, and it runs on anything from a Raspberry Pi to a server farm. Apache 2.0 licensed, Node.js based.

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Cusdis

Comments for small sites without Disqus's baggage: Cusdis is a lightweight, privacy-first, open-source comment system for embedding under blog posts and articles. The embedded JavaScript SDK is about 5 KB gzipped (Disqus is roughly 24 KB), sets no cookies, runs no tracking, and does not require readers to create an account or sign in before commenting. Integration is two lines: a container div with your app ID and an async script tag, with ready-made adapters for common frameworks and static site generators. Moderation is approval-based - new comments stay hidden until you approve them from the dashboard, and email notifications include a Quick Approve link that approves or replies to a comment from your phone without logging in. A webhook fires on every new comment for integrations like Telegram notifications. The widget ships with built-in i18n and dark mode. The stack is TypeScript and Next.js with a Prisma data layer, deployable via Docker with PostgreSQL. Deliberately minimalist: no ads, no reader profiling, and your comment data lives in your own database.

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