Lokalise, Crowdin -> Tolgee
Shopify -> MedusaJS
Typeform -> Formbricks
Auth0 -> Hanko, Stack-auth
Retool -> ToolJet
Courier -> Novu
Launchdarkly -> Flipt, Unleash
Mixpanel -> Posthog
Bitly -> Dub
Notion -> Appflowy
Zoom -> Jitsi
Jira -> Plane
Airtable -> NocoDB
Vercel -> Coolify, Taubyte
Heroku -> Dokku
Firebase -> Pocketbase / Appwrite / Supabase
Shopify -> Prestashop
Slack -> Mattermost
Salesforce CRM -> ERPNext
Dropbox -> NextCloud
Mailchimp -> Mautic
Trello -> Wekan
Docusign -> Documenso
Calendly -> Cal
Datadog -> Prometheus
Google Analytics -> Plausible, Fathom
Zapier -> n8n
Algolia -> Trieve, Melisearch
Mint -> Maybe
Intercom -> Chatwoot
What am I missing?
I don't know what these are, but how am I supposed to google these words and get the correct results?
I currently self-host these infra and apps:
- technitium DNS
- Traefik
- Cerbot
- Home assistant
- samba file shares
- Gerbera media server
- Jellyfin
- Gitlab
- Grafana / influxdb (for telegraf server monitoring + esphome sensors)
- Photoprism
- Syncthing
- Taiga
- Vaultwarden
- offlineimap sync from gmail
I've been thinking about Nextcloud as well, but it seems a bit heavy-handed and wants control over my docker daemon, which I am not sure about.
For example, if I need Postiz to run I need a server and to configure and maintain a lot of services and dependancies:
NX (Monorepo) NextJS (React) NestJS Prisma (Default to PostgreSQL) Redis (BullMQ) Resend (email notifications) Postiz
I use mailchimp, which is not cheap. But if I want to run Mautic, I need a linux server, with an http server and a database running. It as also a cost in money and time.
I am a single man shop, so I don't want a software to take me extra time when something is broken (or to give 4 hours of my time to install and run a clone of mailchimp).
Solving the problem I'm dealing with gets you a lot more points than me being able to fling you a PR, but maybe I'm an outlier here.
Gave up NextCloud a few years ago and went all in on using Google services. Now I think I can return to using more apps running on infra I rent.
What SaaS really sells is ease of setup, use and maintenance.
And source code is no "replacement" --- unless you happen to have the necessary time and skills.