Ackee
pirsch
Our great sponsors
Ackee | pirsch | |
---|---|---|
14 | 41 | |
4,122 | 820 | |
- | 3.5% | |
0.0 | 9.0 | |
6 days ago | 9 days ago | |
JavaScript | Go | |
MIT License | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Ackee
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Proxying Ackee through Netlify
Proxying the requests to Ackee through Netlify comes with some advantages:
- Ask HN: Good open source alternatives to Google Analytics?
- [Seriös] "Accept All" problemet.
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What is a good, lightweight, free alternative to Google Analytics?
I've used Ackee (https://ackee.electerious.com/) for some time now and I love it!
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Switching from Google Analytics to Umami
Ackee - Free Alternative - Probably the most similar solution to Umami and it would have been my second choice. It seems to be pretty popular and well worth checking out.
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Adding self-hosted analytics to your website for free with Umami
Ackee is another open source analytics platform you can deploy on Railway. I first tried Ackee but I prefer Umami because of its Realtime Dashboard that allows me to see active sessions and what webpages are being visited at this very moment.
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How to self host a Privacy respecting analytics solution?
Ackee has a great looking dashboard (Ackee dashoard demo) and the maintainer of this project also plans to support its development (correct me if I am wrong). If you want to support him, donate here. Thus making it pay what you want to model (except for the hosting :p)
- Awesome Clones
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Google Analytics: Stop feeding the beast
If one want to self-hosted, consider using https://ackee.electerious.com/
it looks very slick.
pirsch
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Must-Have Features to Look for in a Blogging Platform
Pirsch Analytics (paid)
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Using Analytics on My Website
I was also looking for server-side analytics, created my own, and now it's a product! The idea is that tracking can be done from both, a JS snippet (for easy integration) and an API. Both rely on fingerprinting and almost provide the same set of features. The API just lacks screen resolution. The method is GDPR (and CCPA and whatnot) compliant.
Original article: https://marvinblum.de/blog/server-side-tracking-without-cook...
Product: https://pirsch.io
before this comes up again: Yes, we checked professionally with an external DPO and it was checked by some companies you've probably heard of externally.
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Site analytics for open source project?
Take a look at Pirsch. You can find a demo with real data here.
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Ask HN: Side project of more that $2k monthly revenue what's your project?
I'm building Pirsch Analytics [0], a privacy-friendly web analytics tool. I think it took the two of us ~1.5 years to get to $2000 MRR. Currently we're setting just above $4000 MRR.
It started as an experiment for my personal website and I was in the same position as you're right now. We were already working on a Notion like app to take notes, but didn't make any money and probably went into the wrong direction. As my prototype seemed to work quite well, we decided to turn it into a product.
My initial goal was to do server-side analytics without the downsides of parsing access logs, but of course we now also have a "regular" JS snippet integration.
You can learn more about our journey here [1] and on our blog [2]. Let me know if you have any questions!
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I'm building a new SaaS tool: open source analytics for the web
Not saying you shouldn’t or anything, but Plausible, Pirsch, and Umami are already privacy friendly open-source analytics.
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Ask HN: Any alternatives to Google Analytics that don't require cookies?
Pirsch has been easy and great IME.
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Ask HN: What’s your startup’s analytics setup? (2023)
If you use Google Analytics, you can get in a lot of trouble if you don't prompt the user with the cookie policy pop up. GDPR is a MF. I feel like it's bad UX to have that pop up, and I don't want to get in trouble, so I opt to use more bare-bones analytics and do a lot of custom logging myself.
The tool I use specifically is https://pirsch.io/, which is very privacy friendly and doesn't have any of the stalky type stuff that Google Analytics has as default. Using this, you don't need to have the GDPR compliance pop-up.
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Recommendations for GDPR/CCPA compliant privacy policy (or just ditching Google Analytics)?
Pirsch
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We built a $1M ARR open source SaaS
I also started a privacy-friendly analytics SaaS without looking at the market. Sometimes it's better to just get started. Otherwise you probably won't start doing anything, as there are existing products most of the time. In my case, I was looking for a Go (golang) solution that I could embed in my website, as a library so to speak, and just turned it into a product later as I was looking for a new project to work on.
We're now at $1500 MRR and growing. I'm also opposing the position of "just being against GA" now and we try to differentiate more. It's almost impossible to get anyone away from GA who does do performance marketing. So I don't quite see how Plausible or other privacy-friendly products are a replacement. But most websites that use GA just don't have to, because they don't rely so much on ads or personal data to get value.
Our product: https://pirsch.io
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We don’t use a staging environment
I use a somewhat similar approach for Pirsch [0]. It's build so that I can run it locally, basically as a fully fledged staging environment. Databases run in Docker, everything else is started using modd [1]. This has proven to be a good setup for quick iterations and testing. I can quickly run all tests on my laptop (Go and TypeScript) and even import data from production to see if the statistics are correct for real data. Of course, there are some things that need to be mocked, like automated backups, but so fare it turns out to work really well.
You can find more on our blog [2] if you would like to know more.
What are some alternatives?
Plausible Analytics - Simple, open source, lightweight (< 1 KB) and privacy-friendly web analytics alternative to Google Analytics.
Umami - Umami is a simple, fast, privacy-focused alternative to Google Analytics.
Matomo - Empowering People Ethically with the leading open source alternative to Google Analytics that gives you full control over your data. Matomo lets you easily collect data from websites & apps and visualise this data and extract insights. Privacy is built-in. Liberating Web Analytics. Star us on Github? +1. And we love Pull Requests!
GoatCounter - Easy web analytics. No tracking of personal data.
Countly - Countly is a product analytics platform that helps teams track, analyze and act-on their user actions and behaviour on mobile, web and desktop applications.
PostHog - 🦔 PostHog provides open-source product analytics, session recording, feature flagging and A/B testing that you can self-host.
Freshlytics - Open source privacy-friendly analytics
nomad-driver-containerd - Nomad task driver for launching containers using containerd.
Fathom Analytics - Fathom Lite. Simple, privacy-focused website analytics. Built with Golang & Preact.
GoAccess - GoAccess is a real-time web log analyzer and interactive viewer that runs in a terminal in *nix systems or through your browser.