243 applications
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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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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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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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Chief-Onboarding

New hires fail from information overload and IT bottlenecks, not lack of goodwill - the observation behind ChiefOnboarding, a free, open-source employee onboarding platform (Django, Celery, PostgreSQL, Redis). Its answer is sequences - drag-and-drop timelines that drip-feed to-do items, resources, courses, forms, and badges to each new hire, triggered by dates or by completing a previous item, so nobody faces everything at once. Onboarding starts before day one: preboarding pages welcome hires early, and colleagues can leave personal messages that appear there. The account provisioning module creates the new hire's Slack, Google, Asana, and other accounts automatically on the scheduled day via a library of integrations plus custom webhooks - the IT ticket queue never gets involved. Everything works through two equivalent interfaces: a full web dashboard and a Slack bot, either usable standalone. Slack can even auto-create new hire accounts when someone joins the workspace and assign default sequences with zero manual action. Colleague tasks with comments and collaboration, a searchable people directory, scheduled introductions, and per-hire timezone awareness (no 3 a.m. notifications) round it out. No trackers, no phoning home - third-party credentials sit in encrypted fields on your server.

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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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EasyAppointments

Service businesses get a booking page without per-booking commissions or monthly SaaS fees from Easy!Appointments, the self-hosted appointment scheduler. Customers pick a service, provider, and open time slot from a clean web form; the system enforces working plans, breaks, and booking rules you define per provider, then confirms by email to both sides. The structure fits real service organizations: multiple providers with individual schedules, multiple service types with their own durations and prices, and admin/secretary roles for front-desk management. Two-way Google Calendar synchronization keeps each provider's external calendar authoritative - book in Easy!Appointments and it appears in Google Calendar, block time in Google and the slot disappears from the booking form. Version 1.6 adds SMS notifications and payment support, and a REST API opens the scheduling data to custom integrations. Built on PHP (CodeIgniter) with MySQL, it installs in a single folder and can share a database with your existing site; a WordPress plugin embeds the booking form directly in pages or posts. The interface ships in dozens of languages with time-zone handling throughout. GPL-3.0 licensed and free for commercial use - a helpdesk, clinic, salon, or consultancy runs its whole booking workflow on its own server.

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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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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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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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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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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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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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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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Collabora Office

Real LibreOffice document engineering in the browser: Collabora Online is built by the company employing much of the former SUSE LibreOffice team - not a reimplementation. This deployment runs CODE (Collabora Online Development Edition), the collabora/code server that renders and edits documents entirely server-side while browsers get high-fidelity WYSIWYG output, so layout and formatting survive round-trips that break lesser converters. Four editors ship in one container: Writer for text documents (comments, track changes with comparison and restoration, form handling), Calc for spreadsheets (advanced formulas, macros, pivot tables, per-user sheet views, server-enforced cell protection), Impress for presentations, and Draw for Visio-class diagrams. Format compatibility spans DOCX, XLSX, PPTX, the ODF family, PDF, and dozens more - including Visio and Publisher import. Real-time collaborative editing supports multiple simultaneous editors with visible cursors and commenting. The architectural point: documents are processed on your server and never leave it, which is why Collabora is the engine behind Nextcloud Office and integrates with ownCloud, Seafile, and any WOPI-speaking host - or embeds in your own application via the SDK. An admin console monitors sessions and memory. For organizations that need Google Docs-style collaboration with actual data sovereignty, this is the reference open-source answer.

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HedgeDoc

Real-time collaborative Markdown behind your own firewall: HedgeDoc (formerly CodiMD, descended from HackMD's open-source edition) keeps team notes on team infrastructure. Share a note's URL and collaborators are editing together instantly - live cursors, changes appearing keystroke by keystroke - in a three-mode interface that toggles between raw Markdown, rendered preview, and side-by-side split. The Markdown dialect is extended where engineers need it: Mermaid, Graphviz, and Vega-Lite diagrams, MathJax for equations, syntax-highlighted code blocks, embedded content, and a presentation mode that turns a note into reveal.js slides with a single YAML header. A dropdown permission system controls each note - freely editable, limited to signed-in users, or locked read-only - and published notes become clean read-only pages for wider distribution. Revisions track every change with the ability to revert to any earlier version. The AGPL-3.0 codebase is light enough to run on a Raspberry Pi and deploys via Docker with PostgreSQL, MySQL, or SQLite. Authentication covers LDAP, SAML, OAuth2, and email. It deliberately stays a focused document editor - no page trees or kanban - and does that one job with excellent keyboard-first ergonomics for meeting notes, RFCs, runbooks, and shared scratchpads.

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Motor Admin

Stop building internal tools and ship your actual product - Motor Admin exists for exactly that. Point this Ruby/Vue application at a PostgreSQL, MySQL, MariaDB, or SQL Server database and it generates a complete CRUD admin panel from your schema in under a minute - search, filters, create, update, delete, all through a polished UI, with every customization done through in-app settings rather than a DSL or boilerplate code. What elevates it beyond CRUD generators is the business-intelligence half: write SQL queries (with variables) and render results as tables, numbers, line/bar/ pie charts, funnels, or markdown; organize reports into shared dashboards; and attach queries and dashboards directly to resource pages as tabs, so an order record shows its revenue history in place. Operations beyond CRUD are covered by custom actions and a WYSIWYG forms builder that posts to your existing REST or GraphQL APIs - send a refund, trigger an email, whatever your backend exposes. Email alerts deliver scheduled reports, Slack sends personalized report alerts, and intelligence search spans all resources. Governance is included: role-based permissions with row- and column-level control (CanCanCan), an audit log of admin activity, multiple database connections, and configuration sync between staging and production. Mobile-optimized, AGPL-licensed, also available as a Rails engine.

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Fireshare

The moment after ShadowPlay saves a great clip is what Fireshare was built for: your friends see it now, not after a YouTube upload, processing queue, and platform terms review. Drop videos into a watched folder and this Flask/React application generates a unique shareable URL for each one, complete with Open Graph metadata - so pasting the link into Discord, Twitter, or Slack produces a proper embed with title, description, and video thumbnail instead of a raw URL. Viewers need no account and no app. Visibility is per-file: public (browseable on your feed), private (unlisted, reachable only by direct link), or password protected. For game clips specifically, Fireshare organizes automatically - clips sort by game with cover art pulled from SteamGridDB, no manual tagging - while tags and full-library search cover everything else. Optional transcoding (CPU or GPU) creates lower-quality renditions so viewers on weak connections get automatic quality adaptation, and video cropping trims clips in place. The extras round out a genuinely finished tool: view counters, timestamped share links, a shuffle button, restrictable uploads, Discord notifications for new videos, an RSS feed of the public feed, mobile support, and LDAP for multi-user setups. No storage limits, no watermarks, no platform deciding what stays up. GPL-licensed.

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OpenHAB

Over 400 technologies and thousands of smart devices from any manufacturer, unified under one roof: openHAB is the vendor-neutral home automation platform with a pluggable binding architecture. Each binding translates a device or service into openHAB's clean abstraction: Things expose Channels, Channels link to Items, and Items feed a rules engine that runs your home. That engine meets you at your skill level: Blockly gives non-programmers drag-and-drop visual logic, JS Scripting (GraalJS with the openhab-js library) is the modern text-based standard, the classic Rules DSL remains supported, and JSR223 opens the door to Python, Ruby, and Groovy. Time- and event-based triggers, scripts, notifications, and voice control compose into automations of any complexity, and users report decade-old rule sets still running rock solid. The Main UI handles configuration, semantic modeling, and now built-in charting - no external Grafana required. Built in Java on Apache Karaf's OSGi runtime and stewarded by the non-profit openHAB Foundation, it requires no cloud to function: everything runs locally, talking directly to your devices. Optional connectors bridge to Alexa, Google Assistant, and HomeKit, with iOS, Android, and web apps for control from anywhere.

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