I left them simply because if my website went down... at first, they gave you control over at least restarting your server but that disappeared and I needed that. If I had to start, I had to contact their support team who might take a few hours to respond. I couldn't have my website being down for more than a few minutes. So I got on a server that allowed me to restart as I deemed fit. Being able to SSH into your own server for additional things you need to do also is a bonus. And I prefer having that control over something I am running then having to reach out to support any time I needed it.
Fair Use. Air gapped. Recycled from work Intel Gen 3 HP Laptop HDD server. For initiating kindergarteners into the joys of "binary corruption" (and get ash ketchum to say silly things). But I am into it! SQLite3 hiscore persistence. WASM emulation. AI upscaling. As a hobby? It's provided wayyy more fun than Minecraft & Roblox combined ;)
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=33657947
FWIW, my answer is still mostly the same as it was then:
- Mediawiki
- Apache Roller
- Apache HTTPD
- eJabberd
- SuiteCRM (a fork of SugarCRM)
- Bugzilla
- Mosquitto
- Jenkins
- Artifactory