243 applications
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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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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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Verdaccio

Private npm packages without shipping code to the public registry or paying for npm Enterprise: Verdaccio is the standard lightweight, zero-config private registry and caching proxy. It runs as a single Node.js process with its own tiny embedded database; no external database is required to start. Point npm, yarn, or pnpm at it and everything behaves as expected: install, publish, unpublish, dist-tags, and deprecation all work against the standard npm endpoints. The uplink system is where it earns its keep: packages not found locally are fetched from configured upstreams (npmjs.org, yarn, JFrog, Nexus, or another Verdaccio), cached as tarballs, and served locally thereafter - cutting CI latency and surviving registry outages. Multiple uplinks chain for failover, and per-package glob patterns in config.yaml route scopes to specific upstreams while controlling access, publish, and unpublish rights per group. You can even override a public package by publishing a patched version under the same name locally. A plugin architecture swaps in auth backends (htpasswd default, LDAP and others available), storage drivers (S3, Google Cloud Storage), middleware routes, and metadata filters. With official Docker images and a Kubernetes Helm chart, it slots into any pipeline in minutes.

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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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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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Owncast

Twitch and YouTube Live, replaced by infrastructure you control: Owncast is a self-hosted live streaming and chat server. Point OBS, Streamlabs, or any RTMP-capable broadcaster at the server's ingest port, and Owncast transcodes the feed with FFmpeg into HLS with multiple quality variants, playing it in a built-in web page with a real-time chat beside it. Chat supports anonymous participation, custom emotes, and moderation tools - message removal, user bans and suspensions - with optional authentication via IndieAuth or a Fediverse account. ActivityPub integration puts the stream on the Fediverse: viewers on Mastodon and compatible services can follow a channel and get notified the moment it goes live. Video delivery can come straight off the server or offload HLS segments to S3-compatible object storage so a modest VPS handles thousands of concurrent viewers while only managing ingest and chat. The backend is a single Go binary with a React frontend - no accounts platform, no database server, no dependency stack - and the player embeds in any website. MIT-licensed, with roughly 9k GitHub stars, zero platform fees, and no algorithm or takedown policy between you and your audience.

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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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Roundcube

Two decades of continuous development made Roundcube the standard-bearer of open-source webmail - a PHP IMAP client that gives any mail server a polished, application-like interface in the browser. It connects to whatever IMAP/SMTP stack you run - Dovecot, Postfix, a hosted mailbox - and delivers the full desktop-client experience: drag-and-drop message management, threaded conversation views, full MIME and HTML mail handling, find-as-you-type address book with groups and LDAP connectors, multiple sender identities, full-text search, and spell checking in dozens of languages. The default Elastic skin is genuinely responsive, working as well on a phone as a desktop, and the entire UI is skinnable. The plugin API is where deployments get shaped: managesieve exposes server-side filter management in the UI, enigma brings PGP encryption and signing via GnuPG, markasjunk trains spam filters, zipdownload batches attachments, password lets users change credentials, and attachment_reminder catches the classic forgotten-attachment email - among hundreds of community plugins. Built-in caching keeps large mailboxes fast, IMAP ACLs and shared folders support team setups, and XSS protection is engineered into the rendering pipeline. It scales from a single personal mailbox to unlimited users, backed by MySQL, MariaDB, PostgreSQL, or SQLite. GPL-licensed with regular security releases.

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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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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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Nanote

100% portability is Nanote's one non-negotiable principle as a self-hosted note-taking app. There is no database - notebooks are plain folders and notes are plain Markdown files on your filesystem, so the same notes remain fully manageable from a terminal, Notepad, or any other editor, and walking away from Nanote costs nothing because your data was never in a proprietary format to begin with. Built with Nuxt and TypeScript around the Milkdown editor, it layers modern conveniences on that plain-file foundation: fast content search across all notes using OS-optimized tooling (ugrep), native Markdown rendering, image and file attachments, and a mobile-friendly layout for reading and editing on a phone. Clever remark directives make plain text interactive - typing ::file inserts an inline upload picker, while ::today, ::now, and ::tomorrow expand to live dates and times. A fully typed REST API with validation covers automation, and access is protected by a configurable secret key. Deployment is one container with three env vars: paths for notes, uploads, and config, all bind-mountable so your Markdown lives wherever you want it - including inside an existing sync setup. AGPL-licensed and actively daily-driven by its author.

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Faved

Large link collections stay fast and organized in Faved, a private, self-hosted bookmark manager built for exactly that job. Its core is a nested tagging system that outgrows flat folders: place Go and Python under Programming Languages, color-code tags, add descriptions, pin frequent ones to the top of the sidebar, and optionally roll up child-tag items into parent views. Saving is frictionless - a lightweight bookmarklet works in any desktop or mobile browser without extensions, and Apple devices can send links through the native Share menu. Faved fetches titles, descriptions, and preview images automatically, keeps that metadata fresh over time, and flags duplicates as you save. Instant as-you-type search, flexible sorting, and bulk actions (retag, delete, refetch) keep collections of any size manageable, while customizable layouts - card, list, or table - plus a system-synced dark mode adapt the interface to your workflow. Migration is first-class: import from Chrome, Safari, Firefox, or Edge with folder structure preserved, or move from Pocket and Raindrop.io keeping tags and collections. The stack is deliberately light - PHP 8 with SQLite behind a React/Tailwind frontend - deploying via Docker with no external dependencies. All data stays local: no ads, no tracking, and no risk of your library vanishing with a discontinued service.

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Keila

Among open-source Mailchimp alternatives, Keila has the most modern UI - built in Germany on Elixir and Phoenix (the PETAL stack), with GDPR-conscious defaults including an optional no-tracking mode, and 100% open source with no proprietary premium tier. Campaign authoring is flexible three ways: a visual block editor with multi-column layouts, Markdown with or without WYSIWYG for hybrid HTML-plus-plain- text sends, and raw MJML for hand-coded designs. The personalization system is unusually clean - every contact carries custom data as a single JSON object (populated from sign-up form fields or pushed from your CMS/CRM), and Shopify's Liquid template language renders it into fully dynamic emails. Targeting uses a visual segment editor backed by a powerful segment language for complex logic over tags, language preferences, and any custom field. Sign-up forms with custom fields grow your lists; open and click tracking measures campaigns; scheduled sending handles timing. Delivery pipes through your own SMTP or first-class integrations with AWS SES (including automated bounce handling), SendGrid, Mailgun, and Postmark. A full REST API manages contacts, campaigns, and segments, with Erlang/OTP reliability underneath. Comfortable at 100K+ subscribers. AGPL-licensed, EU-hosted project, actively developed.

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LubeLogger

Vehicle maintenance records shouldn't live in a homemade spreadsheet and a shoebox of receipts - LubeLogger exists because of exactly that. It's a self-hosted .NET web application (from Hargata Softworks) that gives every vehicle in your garage a complete digital history: service, repair, and upgrade records categorized and searchable, with invoices and receipts attached as documents; fuel fill-ups that compute economy in MPG, UK MPG, L/100KM, or KM/L without spreadsheet tedium; taxes, odometer logs, inspections, equipment, and supplies inventory for tracking the parts and fluids on your shelf. The reminder system is what saves engines: recurring reminders trigger by date, odometer reading, or whichever comes first - exactly how real service intervals work - so oil changes and timing belts stop relying on memory. A dashboard summarizes expenses by year, month, and category, a planner tracks to-dos by type, priority, and progress, and professional vehicle reports print a full history - genuinely useful when selling a car. Collaboration is built in: invite household members as collaborators on shared vehicles, with single sign-on support. Custom fields adapt records to your needs, CSV import/export moves data freely, an API enables automation, and the mobile-tested UI installs as a PWA on iOS and Android. MIT-licensed.

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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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Statping-ng

A status page and uptime monitor in one Go binary: Statping-ng - the actively maintained fork of Statping - replaces the UptimeRobot-plus-Statuspage combo with a ~20 MB Docker image using under 50 MB of RAM. It checks services over HTTP, TCP, UDP, ICMP ping, and gRPC health checks on configurable intervals, with per-service timeouts, expected status codes, POST requests with custom JSON bodies, SSL verification, and failure thresholds before alerting. The public status page is the differentiator against plain monitors: visitors see live status, uptime percentages, and latency charts grouped into service categories, with incident announcements and scheduled-maintenance messages you publish from the dashboard - and Sass-based custom styling matches the page to your brand rather than a vendor template. When something fails, notifiers fire immediately: Slack, Discord, Telegram, SMTP email, PagerDuty, Twilio SMS, Pushover, and custom webhooks, each testable before saving. Because notifiers are single Go files, the plugin system makes new channels straightforward. A RESTful API manages services and reads uptime data programmatically, and the free Statping mobile app connects to your server via QR code for on-the-go monitoring. Data persists to SQLite, MySQL, or PostgreSQL. Point it at internal services too - anything the container can reach is monitorable.

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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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Hasty Paste

Paste some text, hit save, share the link - Hasty Paste is a fast, minimal pastebin written in Python on the async Quart framework, named, by its author's own admission, "because you use it so fast without a care in the world." No accounts, no authentication, no friction - built for the everyday case of handing a debug log, config snippet, or stack trace to someone in tech support or a chat channel. Pastes get randomly generated IDs, with an optional "long" ID mode that makes brute-force URL guessing impractical, and expiry times ensure throwaway content actually gets thrown away. Optional Pygments syntax highlighting makes code readable, a dark theme spares your eyes, and the whole interface works without JavaScript - it renders in terminal browsers and under the strictest script blockers. Storage is a custom flat-file system (no database), caching runs internally or through Redis for busier instances, and a REST API plus the companion "Hastily Paste It" CLI script enable piping command output straight into a paste from the terminal. The Alpine-based Docker image is tiny, resource usage is minimal, and the license is AGPL.

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