243 applications
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Freescout

Unlimited agents, unlimited tickets, unlimited mailboxes, forever, on a $4 VPS - FreeScout's pricing inversion is why it became the most popular self-hosted Help Scout alternative, a PHP/Laravel help desk and shared inbox developed from scratch over eight years. The inbox deliberately behaves like Gmail or Outlook, so new support agents need close to zero training. The email-support core is genuinely complete: seamless IMAP/SMTP integration including modern Microsoft Exchange authentication, collision detection that warns when two agents open the same conversation, canned responses, auto-replies, internal notes, open tracking, starring, forwarding, merging, and moving conversations between mailboxes, phone-call logging, push notifications, and an auto-refreshing conversation list - plus screenshot pasting straight from the clipboard into replies. It's 100% mobile-friendly, fully screen-reader accessible, and translated into 28 languages. Beyond the core, an ecosystem of 100+ modules (mostly one-time $12-20 purchases) adds knowledge base, workflows with Gmail-filter-style automation rules, satisfaction ratings, time tracking, tags, custom fields, LDAP, Slack, WhatsApp and Telegram channels, and an API with webhooks - pay only for what your team needs. Web installer and updater included. AGPL-licensed.

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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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Shiori

Most web links eventually break - the sobering statistic Shiori, a bookmark manager with archiving by default, is built on. Its answer is archiving by default - where possible, every bookmark you save gets a clean, readable offline copy parsed from the page, ads and navigation stripped, so the article survives even after the original URL dies. Conceived as a simple Pocket clone and written in Go, the entire server is a single binary using roughly 25-30 MB of RAM with SQLite out of the box (Postgres and MySQL supported) - genuinely the lightest archiving bookmark manager you can run. Saving is one click through the Firefox and Chrome extensions, and finding things again is where Shiori quietly outperforms its size: full-text search covers the archived page content, not just titles and tags, so you can find that article by a phrase you remember from paragraph six. Reader mode presents the cleaned text; archive mode shows the preserved page. It's dual-interface by design - a pretty web UI (installable as a PWA on mobile) and a complete CLI for terminal devotees - plus a REST API for scripting. Pocket imports work natively, and Netscape HTML handles browser imports and exports. Multi-user support included. MIT-licensed.

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Upvote RSS

The antidote to doomscrolling: Upvote RSS turns Reddit, Hacker News, Lemmy, Lobsters, PieFed, Mbin, and trending GitHub repositories into calm, filtered RSS feeds. The MIT-licensed PHP app's killer feature is intelligent filtering: beyond simple score thresholds, the "posts per day" filter analyzes a community's recent history and computes the score cutoff that yields your target volume - say, exactly three r/technology posts daily - while a percentage-based threshold mode stays consistent as communities grow. Feeds are rich, not bare links: parsed full-article content via Readability (with optional Readability.js, Mercury, or Browserless for JavaScript-heavy pages), embedded videos and image galleries, top-voted comments with pinned-moderator filtering, scores, reading-time estimates, and optional AI summaries through Ollama, OpenAI, Gemini, Anthropic, Mistral, DeepSeek, or any OpenAI-compatible endpoint - with automatic provider fallback. A web UI builds the feed URL interactively with live preview; paste the result into any RSS reader. Reddit support includes custom domains like old.reddit.com plus NSFW filtering and blurring. Caching via filesystem, Redis, or APCu keeps repeated fetches cheap and avoids re-running paid summarizations.

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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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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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Keeper

Work, personal, business, and school calendars at different providers double-book because no one system sees your real availability - Keeper solves that multi-calendar collision problem. Its pull-compare-push sync engine aggregates events from Google Calendar, Outlook/Office 365, iCloud, FastMail, any CalDAV server, or read-only iCal/ICS feeds, and pushes blocking events to one or many destination calendars so time slots align everywhere. The design is deliberately content-agnostic - it syncs timeslots, not titles or descriptions, so a personal appointment shows as busy time on your work calendar without leaking details. Sync logic is clean: events Keeper creates carry a traceable UID suffix, deletions propagate, and orphaned entries are purged automatically. A token-authenticated aggregated iCal feed combines selected calendars into one subscribable URL for Apple Calendar or Thunderbird. An optional MCP server gives AI agents read-only calendar access over OAuth 2.1 - list calendars and query events by date range, with no write capability. Built with Next.js and Bun under AGPL-3.0, the standalone Docker image bundles web, API, cron, worker, Redis, and PostgreSQL in one container, and self-hosting unlocks every Pro feature - unlimited calendars and one-minute sync intervals - for free.

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Ackee

Page views, referrers, browsers, and screen sizes - Ackee delivers the analytics developers actually check, from a deliberately minimal Node.js and MongoDB stack that skips both Matomo's weight and Google Analytics' cloud dependency. Its defining constraint is anonymization: no cookies, no unique user tracking, and a multi-step anonymization process that keeps visitors unidentifiable while the aggregate numbers stay useful. In its default anonymous mode Ackee collects no personally identifiable information at all, which means GDPR and CCPA compliance out of the box and no cookie consent banner on your sites. A detailed mode adds screen size, language, and per-visit referrers - still without cookies or fingerprinting. Integration mirrors the Google Analytics pattern: create a domain in settings, drop the generated ackee-tracker snippet into your pages, and data appears in a clean single-page dashboard. One instance tracks multiple domains, and custom events capture button clicks, signups, and conversions. The distinctive engineering choice is the fully documented GraphQL API: everything the dashboard shows comes from that API, so you can query active visitors, average duration, and view statistics programmatically, feed data in from apps and services beyond websites, or build an entirely custom interface on top. If you want bare-minimum analytics with a real API and zero privacy anxiety, this is the tool.

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EspoCRM

Teams tired of paying Salesforce or HubSpot per seat run EspoCRM: an AGPL-licensed PHP application with a fast single-page frontend over a REST API, covering sales, support, and marketing in one uncluttered interface. The sales core is complete - leads, contacts, accounts, opportunities with customizable pipeline stages, kanban views, calendars, meetings, and calls. Email is deeply integrated rather than bolted on: IMAP sync links messages to CRM records automatically, and mass email campaigns run with reusable templates, tracking, and Web-to-Lead forms feeding the funnel. Support teams get case management and a customer portal where clients track their own tickets and access a knowledge base. The real differentiator is the Entity Manager: create custom entities, fields, relationships, and layouts from the admin UI without code, with dynamic logic showing or hiding fields conditionally - EspoCRM is as much a business-application platform as a CRM. Formula scripting handles calculated fields and record automation in the free core; the optional Advanced Pack adds visual BPM process design and workflow rules. Role-based permissions with team and territory scoping, full-text search, reports, and a straightforward REST API for n8n or custom integrations round it out. Runs on PHP 8.3+ with MySQL, MariaDB, or PostgreSQL - unlimited users, zero per-seat fees.

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Muse

"A highly-opinionated midwestern self-hosted Discord music bot that doesn't suck," per its own README - Muse is built for servers the size of you, your friends, and your friends' friends. It exists because the big public music bots kept getting shut down or paywalled, and self-hosting yours means nobody can take it away. Written in TypeScript on discord.js, it joins voice channels and plays audio resolved from YouTube via yt-dlp, and given optional Spotify API credentials it auto-converts Spotify tracks, albums, artists, and entire playlists to playable equivalents. The playback details show real care: seeking within songs and videos, livestream support, local caching so repeated plays start instantly, volume normalization across tracks, and configurable volume controls including optional ducking that lowers music when people speak. SponsorBlock integration can skip non-music segments automatically. Users save favorite queries as reusable shortcuts, and one Muse instance serves multiple guilds simultaneously - one deployment for all your communities. Configuration is three environment variables (Discord token, YouTube API key, optional Spotify pair) and the personality is free: there is no vote-to-skip, because "this is anarchy, not a democracy," and the bot remains a loyal Green Bay Packers fan. MIT-licensed and easily extendable.

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CodeX Docs

Writing docs should feel like editing a modern document, not wrangling Markdown files - CodeX Docs delivers that on Editor.js, the block-styled editor its CodeX team builds and thousands of products use. Content is composed from clean blocks (headings, lists, code, images, embeds) with a UI that reads well on both desktop and mobile, and pages render statically with human-readable, SEO-friendly URLs. Structure is free-form: pages nest to any depth, so a flat FAQ and a deep product manual coexist in one instance, and the UI tunes to fit - collapse sections, hide the sidebar. The operational footprint is deliberately tiny. No database is required: the default driver persists to a local folder, with MongoDB available when you want it, and the whole app configures through one YAML file (overridable with APP_CONFIG_ environment variables) covering title, start page, auth password, and JWT secret. Editing mode sits behind password authentication. Thoughtful extras are wired in: readers can report misprints straight to your Telegram or Slack, Hawk error tracking catches frontend and backend exceptions, and Yandex Metrica analytics is a one-line config. A ready-made Helm chart covers Kubernetes. Written in TypeScript.

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Shaarli

Personal, minimalist, database-free bookmarking - Shaarli is a philosophy as much as an app. Everything lives in a single compressed datastore file inside data/: no MySQL, no PostgreSQL, backup by copying one directory. That write-once/read-many file is usually served straight from OS disk caches, which is why a decade-old Shaarli instance with tens of thousands of links still responds instantly. Designed deliberately single-user, it saves URL, title, unlimited-length description, and tags (with autocomplete, renaming, and merging), marks entries public or private, and automatically strips utm_source and fb tracking parameters from saved URLs. That description field is why the community uses Shaarli as far more than bookmarks: a microblog, read-it-later queue, code-snippet base, pastebin, and shared clipboard between machines. Sharing is one click via bookmarklet or Android apps; consumption is per-tag RSS/Atom feeds plus a daily digest feed; search is full-text with tag filtering. A REST API opens it to any client, a plugin and theme system extends the PHP core (Markdown rendering, thumbnails), and import/export uses browser-standard Netscape HTML - your data enters and leaves freely. LDAP login is supported, no telemetry is sent anywhere, and the UI degrades gracefully without JavaScript. The anti-cloud Delicious.

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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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Wally

Started as an ExpenseOwl-inspired project, Wally grew into a lightweight, self-hosted expense tracker more capable in every direction its author touched. The backend is Python FastAPI over SQLite, which means every deployment ships a full REST API with interactive documentation at /api/docs - automating imports or wiring in external tools requires no reverse engineering, and when the optional login page is enabled you can mint scoped API keys from the Settings page for token-based integrations. The transactions view is built on AG Grid, bringing real search, column sorting, and per-column filtering to your ledger, with a footer totaling rows, income, and expenses for whatever slice you have filtered. Dashboards go beyond the usual monthly doughnut: a Change button swaps in year-scale line graphs so you can track a single category - restaurants, say - across time. Recurring transactions edit intelligently, letting you apply changes to all instances or only future ones. CSV import and export use a simple six-column format handled from Settings, the refined dark theme is genuinely easy on the eyes, and the interface is translated into more than ten languages. The whole thing runs from one small container with a single data volume.

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Mstream

"The easiest music streaming server available" is mStream's own billing, and the claim holds up: a lightweight Node.js app that turns a folder of audio files into a private streaming service in minutes, no external database required. Its filesystem-based design is the clever part - the API mirrors your folder structure, so you can browse and play music immediately, before any library scan finishes, and your organization on disk is your organization in the app. It streams flac, mp3, wav, ogg, opus, aac, and m4a, which matters to the audiophile crowd: FLAC plays uncompressed, bit-perfect, with gapless playback for live albums and continuous mixes. The web player runs anywhere a browser does and packs personality - a Milkdrop-style visualizer (Butterchurn), playlist sharing via links, and drag-and-drop uploads straight through the file explorer. Native iOS and Android apps add the feature streaming subscriptions can't match: sync your collection to your phone for true offline playback of music you own. Multi-user support assigns separate directories and permissions per account. Resource usage is famously light - mStream is tested on multi-terabyte libraries and runs happily on a Raspberry Pi, so a small RepoCloud instance serves a lifetime's collection. GPL-licensed, with zero listening-habit telemetry.

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Moocup

Drop your screenshot, a base style is applied, style it however you wish, and export - "that's basically it," says Moocup's own author, and the description holds. The workflow is genuinely seconds long. Drag an image in and it lands on an attractive backdrop immediately; from there you adjust backgrounds, gradients, padding, borders, shadows, and framing with live preview until it matches your taste, then export a high-quality image ready for a portfolio page, README, blog post, tweet, or slide deck. There are no accounts, no watermarks, and no upload to anyone's cloud - as a self-hosted static app, your screenshots never leave your infrastructure, which matters when the screenshot shows a proprietary dashboard or unreleased product. It runs entirely in the browser from a tiny nginx container, works on any device, and requires zero design skill: the smart defaults do the heavy lifting, and everything else is optional tinkering.

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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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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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