GIT_FEED

DioxusLabs/dioxus

Fullstack app framework for web, desktop, and mobile.

View on GitHub

What it does

Dioxus is a software toolkit that lets developers build apps for websites, desktops (Mac/Windows/Linux), and mobile phones all from a single shared codebase, rather than writing separate code for each platform. It handles common development headaches like live previewing changes instantly and managing how app data flows, so teams can ship products faster across multiple surfaces.

Why it matters

For product teams, this means significantly lower development costs and faster time-to-market since one engineering team can target web, iOS, Android, and desktop simultaneously instead of maintaining separate codebases. With over 34,000 stars on GitHub it has strong developer adoption, signaling it could become a serious competitor to established cross-platform tools like React Native or Flutter.

33Active

On the radar — signal detected

Stars
35.5k
Forks
1.6k
Contributors
424
Language
Rust

Score updated Apr 4, 2026

Related projects

Web Platform Tests (WPT) is a massive shared test suite that checks whether all major web browsers — Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge, and others — behave consistently when displaying websites and web apps. Think of it as a universal quality checklist that browser makers run to confirm their software follows the agreed-upon rules of how the web should work.

// why it matters When browsers behave differently, developers must build workarounds that add cost and slow down shipping — WPT is the industry's shared mechanism for reducing that friction, making the web a more reliable platform for products to run on. For builders, broader browser consistency means less money spent on cross-browser bug fixes and greater confidence that web-based products will reach users as intended, regardless of what device or browser they use.

HTML5.9k stars3.7k forks3233 contrib

MDN Web Docs is the internet's most comprehensive free reference library for web development, covering the rules and standards that govern how websites and apps are built across browsers. Maintained by thousands of volunteers and backed by Mozilla, it serves as the authoritative guide that developers worldwide consult when building anything for the web.

// why it matters With over 14,000 pages and 45,000 contributors, MDN is the de facto standard that shapes how developers learn and implement web technologies — meaning it indirectly influences every product built for the web. For founders and product teams, it signals what web capabilities are available and standardized, helping inform decisions about what features are safe to build on without compatibility risks.

Markdown10.6k stars23.2k forks5510 contrib

The Supabase CLI is a command-line tool that lets developers manage their Supabase projects — an open-source alternative to Google Firebase — directly from their computer, including setting up local development environments, managing database changes, and deploying serverless functions. It essentially gives builders a fast, scriptable way to control their entire backend infrastructure without touching a web dashboard.

// why it matters As more startups choose Supabase over Firebase or custom backends to move faster, having a robust CLI means entire backend workflows can be automated, version-controlled, and reproduced — reducing errors and speeding up shipping. With nearly 2,000 stars and 163 contributors, this is a well-adopted tool in a growing ecosystem, signaling strong developer momentum behind Supabase as a serious Firebase competitor.

Go2.0k stars416 forks163 contrib

Oh My Codex (OMX) is a productivity layer that sits on top of OpenAI's Codex coding assistant, giving it structured workflows, specialized team roles, and persistent memory so it can handle more complex, multi-step software projects. Think of it like a project manager and task coordinator built around an AI coding tool — it keeps work organized, remembers context, and can run coordinated parallel tasks instead of just answering one question at a time.

// why it matters As AI coding assistants move from novelty to daily infrastructure, the teams that win will be those who can reliably orchestrate AI across entire workflows — not just single prompts — and OMX's rapid adoption (nearly 12,000 stars) signals strong builder demand for exactly that layer. For founders and product leaders, this points to a growing market for 'AI workflow orchestration' tools that make autonomous coding agents practical enough to trust with real product work.

TypeScript14.6k stars1.3k forks27 contrib10.3k dl/wk
// SUBSCRIBE

The repos that moved this week, why they matter, and what to watch next. One email. No noise.