GIT_FEED

Pouzor/homelable

Self-hosted homelab infrastructure visualizer — interactive network diagram with live status monitoring

View on GitHub

What it does

Homelable is a self-hosted tool that lets you map out all the devices and services running on your home or office network, displaying them as an interactive visual diagram you can customize and export. It automatically discovers what's on your network, then continuously checks whether each device or service is online or offline — giving you a live dashboard of your entire infrastructure at a glance.

Why it matters

As more founders and small teams run their own servers to cut cloud costs, visibility into what's running and what's broken becomes a real operational need — Homelable addresses a gap that enterprise tools like Datadog fill expensively. The nearly 1,000 stars signal strong organic demand in the self-hosted movement, suggesting a potential commercial opportunity around managed monitoring for lean infrastructure teams.

34Active

On the radar — signal detected

Stars
996
Forks
33
Contributors
2
Language
TypeScript

Score updated Apr 5, 2026

Related projects

This project is a plugin that lets teams use Terraform — a popular tool for setting up and managing cloud infrastructure through written configuration files — to control virtually any resource on Amazon Web Services, from databases and servers to networking and security settings. Instead of manually clicking through the AWS console or writing custom scripts, teams can describe their entire cloud setup in code and deploy it consistently and repeatably.

// why it matters With over 10,000 forks and 4,600 contributors, this is effectively the standard way companies automate their AWS infrastructure, meaning it underpins the deployment pipelines of countless startups and enterprises. For founders and builders, adopting this tool means faster, more reliable infrastructure changes and less risk of costly human error as their products scale.

Go10.8k stars10.1k forks4651 contrib

Continuwuity is a self-hosted chat server built on Matrix, an open messaging network that lets people communicate across different platforms without relying on a central company like Slack or Discord. It allows organizations or individuals to run their own private messaging infrastructure while still being able to chat with users on any other Matrix-compatible service worldwide.

// why it matters As businesses grow increasingly wary of vendor lock-in and data privacy risks with centralized communication tools, self-hosted alternatives like this give companies full ownership and control over their internal messaging. The ability to bridge into existing platforms like Discord also means adoption doesn't require abandoning current tools, lowering the switching cost significantly.

Rust696 stars19 forks197 contrib

Zephyr is a free, open-source operating system designed specifically for tiny, low-power devices like sensors, wearables, and smart home gadgets — the kinds of chips that don't have enough memory or processing power to run a full operating system like Linux. It handles the fundamental software layer that lets developers build applications on thousands of different hardware devices, with built-in support for wireless connectivity like Bluetooth.

// why it matters With nearly 15,000 stars and close to 4,000 contributors, Zephyr has become the de facto standard operating system for connected hardware products, meaning any company building IoT devices, wearables, or embedded products will likely encounter it as a foundational choice. Backing or building on Zephyr reduces time-to-market for hardware startups and avoids vendor lock-in, making it a critical piece of infrastructure in the growing market for connected physical products.

C14.9k stars8.9k forks4008 contrib

Helm is a package manager for Kubernetes — the popular system for running software at scale in the cloud — that lets teams bundle, share, and deploy complex applications using reusable templates called Charts. Think of it like an app store or package installer (similar to how you'd install software on a Mac with Homebrew) but designed specifically for cloud infrastructure.

// why it matters With nearly 30,000 stars and almost 1,000 contributors, Helm has become the de facto standard for deploying software on Kubernetes, meaning any product running on cloud infrastructure is likely touched by this tool. For founders and PMs, this signals that standardizing on Helm for deployments reduces operational complexity and makes it easier to hire, scale, and ship faster.

Go29.6k stars7.6k forks991 contrib
// SUBSCRIBE

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