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.
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.
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.
PowerDNS-Admin
Raw zone files and API calls become something a whole team can operate safely once PowerDNS-Admin puts its web interface in front of a PowerDNS authoritative server. It's a Python/Flask application covering full forward and reverse zone management, with the touches that matter in daily DNS work: zone templates for stamping out consistent new domains, easy IPv6 PTR record editing (reverse zones by hand are misery), full IDN/Punycode support for internationalized domains, and DynDNS 2 protocol support so routers and scripts can update records the way they would against a commercial dynamic-DNS service. Access control is enterprise-grade: local users, LDAP against OpenLDAP or Active Directory, SAML, and OAuth via Google, GitHub, Azure, or OpenID Connect, hardened with TOTP two-factor authentication. Role-based permissions extend to zone-specific access control - hand a developer their project's zone without exposing the rest of your namespace - and activity logging records who changed which record when, the audit trail bare PowerDNS never gives you. The dashboard monitors PDNS service configuration and statistics, and its own API exposes zone and record management for automation on top of the UI. Runs against MySQL/MariaDB or PostgreSQL, talking to PowerDNS through its REST API. MIT-licensed.
Monetr
After the bills are covered, how much is actually safe to spend? monetr organizes an entire budgeting application around that one question. Inspired by the defunct Simple bank, it budgets paycheck by paycheck rather than month by month. Funding schedules encode when you get paid - including multiple schedules per account and a weekend-exclusion option for deposits that land early - and every expense or savings goal is tied to one. monetr then calculates how much of each recurring obligation (rent, car payment, subscriptions, on any repeat interval) to set aside from each paycheck, so a large bill never has to come out of a single check. What remains after allocations is surfaced as Free-To-Use, and a forecasting timeline projects contributions, due dates, and leftover funds forward so low-balance periods are visible before they happen. Transactions arrive either as OFX uploads from your bank or automatically through a Plaid connection using your own API credentials, keeping balances and transactions synced without manual entry. The app is mobile-friendly and installable as a PWA on desktop or phone. Self-hosting via Docker Compose is completely free, with all source code public and your financial data on your own hardware.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Manager.io
Full double-entry accounting on your own server: Manager.io Server Edition runs the same engine as the free desktop edition as a web server, so unlimited users work in unlimited businesses concurrently, with all books on infrastructure you control. The module coverage is genuinely comprehensive - general ledger with a customizable chart of accounts, sales and purchase invoices, quotes and orders, bank and cash account reconciliation, inventory with stock tracking, fixed assets with depreciation, payroll, multi-currency with exchange gains and losses, tax codes for VAT and GST regimes, and the complete reporting stack: balance sheet, profit and loss, trial balance, aged receivables and payables, and cash flow statements. The interface is translated into more than seventy languages, reflecting a genuinely global user base. The licensing model is the refreshing part: a server license is a one-time perpetual purchase, not a subscription - twelve months of updates included, optional renewals after, no per-user tiers, no data limits, and you can downgrade to the free desktop edition anytime, so your books are never hostage. Businesses wanting collaborative accounting behind their own firewall, with data sovereignty and no monthly fees, get exactly that.
Lingva Translate
What Nitter was to Twitter and Invidious is to YouTube, Lingva Translate is to Google Translate: a privacy front-end delivering the service's full capability while cutting Google out of the loop between you and your text. Built on Next.js with TypeScript and Chakra UI, it uses the purpose-built Lingva Scraper to fetch translations from Google Translate without your browser ever touching a Google-related service - no cookies, no tracking, no account, while retaining what makes Google Translate hard to give up: 100+ languages with the translation quality of Google's production models, unlike offline engines that trade privacy for accuracy. The clean interface covers automatic source-language detection, text-to-speech audio playback for pronunciations, definitions and examples, and light/dark themes. For developers, every instance doubles as a translation API: a RESTful endpoint at /api/v1/:source/:target/:query returns JSON translations, an audio endpoint serves TTS buffers, and a full GraphQL API at /api/graphql exposes translations, audio, and language lists for richer integrations - all unmetered on your own instance. Deployment is a single stateless container with one environment variable for the site domain; defaults for theme and language pair are configurable. GPL-licensed, and popular as the translation backend for privacy-respecting apps.
pgweb
Inspect a PostgreSQL database right now, without installing pgAdmin or exposing Postgres to the internet - pgweb answers that recurring need. It's a Go application from Dan Sosedoff, a decade in development, shipped as a single statically-linked binary with zero dependencies - the Docker image is essentially just the executable - that puts a clean browser UI in front of any PostgreSQL 9.1+ server. Connect via URL string or host/port credentials, and browse tables, views, and sequences from the sidebar; selecting a table shows its rows immediately alongside tabs for structure, indexes, and constraints. The Query tab executes arbitrary SQL with query history, and the Explain Query button renders the query plan - estimated cost, row counts, execution strategy - which makes pgweb a quick performance-triage tool, not just a browser. Results and entire tables export to CSV, JSON, or XML in a click. Connectivity is more flexible than its size suggests: native SSH tunneling (password or key) reaches databases behind firewalls, server bookmarks make switching instances instant, and an optional multi-session mode handles several databases concurrently. For a RepoCloud stack full of Postgres-backed apps, one pgweb instance is the universal inspection hatch. MIT-licensed, actively maintained.
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.
ExpenseOwl
Log a date, amount, and category; get a clean monthly pie chart and a cashflow strip showing income, expenses, and net balance - ExpenseOwl is expense tracking stripped to what actually matters. The MIT-licensed Go application deliberately is not a budgeting system - no envelopes, no accounts, no double-entry, no bank sync - because its author found tools like Firefly III and Actual too heavy for the simple question "where did this month's money go?" The dashboard makes that question fast: click a pie slice to exclude fixed costs like rent and see discretionary spending clearly, then drill into a chronological table view to inspect or delete individual transactions. Recurring transactions handle salaries and subscriptions automatically, optional tags add a second classification axis, and settings cover custom categories, currency symbol, and a configurable month start date for non-calendar pay cycles. CSV import migrates data from virtually any other tool, and CSV export keeps your data portable. It ships as a self-contained binary and multi-architecture Docker image with zero internet interaction, stores data in flat JSON files by default (PostgreSQL optional), and installs as a PWA on phones. Single-user by design; pair it with an authenticating reverse proxy if exposed publicly.
Ties
A federated bookmark manager written in Rust: Ties (formerly linkblocks) is your own small corner of the web for saving, organizing, and sharing good pages, connected to the fediverse over ActivityPub. Instead of rigid folders, bookmarks live in arbitrarily nested lists that link together into a knowledge graph. Saved pages are fetched, converted to a readable archived version, and stored in the database, so full-text search covers titles, URLs, and the actual page text - and the content survives if the original disappears. The federation model is deliberately anti-viral: there is no global timeline and no algorithmic feed. You publish public lists for anyone, follow users whose taste you trust, and mark trusted users whose bookmarks become part of your search range - extendable to trusted-users-of-trusted-users for a wider net. Public bookmarks post to Mastodon timelines, and WebFinger lookup makes your handle discoverable across fediverse platforms. Operationally it is about as light as web software gets: a single binary with all assets baked in, integrated TLS so it can run without a reverse proxy, PostgreSQL as the only dependency, OIDC single sign-on, and a bookmarklet for one-click saves. Note the project is alpha: single-user instances only, and all data should be considered public. AGPL-3.0 licensed, built with Rust and htmx.
Hiccup
"Get to your most important links, FAST" - Hiccup's README states its whole mission in that one line, and the static start page delivers it. It is a client-side React single-page app - no backend, no database, no accounts - driven entirely by a config.json that defines featured link cards, categorized sections, and search providers. The search bar is the power feature: it queries your own links by name, URL, and tag while simultaneously offering external providers like Google, DuckDuckGo, and Amazon (plus custom URL-template providers you define), with arrow-key navigation and Enter to launch, so muscle memory replaces mousing. Editing happens in the browser - drag and drop links and background images, tweak cards in edit mode - with changes persisting to localStorage; a built-in config manager exports the JSON for hosting, and remote profile loading pulls a shared config across every browser and device you use. Multiple profiles keep home-server, work, and dev-tool link sets separate. PWA support installs it on a phone home screen, caching strategies keep it fast offline, read-only mode suits kiosk displays, and Cmd/Ctrl+/ reveals the full hotkey reference. Serve it from any static host and point your new tab at it.
ClassicPress
WordPress without Gutenberg: ClassicPress, the community-led fork, keeps the TinyMCE classic editor as the default and strips the block editor and Full Site Editing out of core entirely. The result is roughly half WordPress's size - obsolete libraries like jQueryUI, Thickbox, and Flash support are gone, replaced by native HTML5 elements and modern alternatives like SortableJS - which translates to a measurably faster admin and a leaner attack surface. Forked from WordPress 6.2, it remains compatible with the vast plugin and theme ecosystem targeting that lineage (anything not requiring blocks generally works, helped by a blocks-compatibility mode), and the PHP-first WordPress API developers have used for over a decade works unchanged - no React required to extend your CMS. The fork adds its own improvements: built-in media categories and tags with bulk editing, revision management that lets you prune database bloat, native HTML5 dialogs for accessible touch-friendly menus, and recent releases bring APCu object-cache support, vanilla-JS core widgets, and performant translations. Governance is democratic and community-driven rather than corporate. For content sites, business sites, and blogs where the classic editing workflow is the feature, ClassicPress is stability as a philosophy.
Flatnotes
A web interface for a folder of Markdown files - Flatnotes is exactly that, and the discipline of that design is why people love it. Every note is a plain .md file in a single flat directory: no database, no proprietary format, no hierarchy to maintain, no export step if you ever leave. Edit notes in the browser or open the same files in VS Code or Obsidian, sync them with Syncthing or rsync while the app is running - the Whoosh-powered search index synchronizes incrementally, so external edits just show up. The interface is a clean Vue.js app with both WYSIWYG and raw Markdown editing modes (TOAST UI Editor), instant full-text search behind the "/" shortcut with partial-match support, wikilinks for cross-note references, and automatic tag extraction from #hashtags in note bodies. Light and dark themes and a mobile-responsive layout make it pleasant everywhere. Authentication is flexible for a personal tool: none, read-only, username/password, or TOTP two-factor. A documented REST API covers create/read/update/delete for automation. The operational story is the quiet selling point - the only state is the notes folder and a rebuildable index, so backup is copying a directory. For a personal notepad that respects your data, Flatnotes nails minimal.