counter.dev
Countly
counter.dev | Countly | |
---|---|---|
18 | 13 | |
880 | 5,466 | |
- | 0.5% | |
7.9 | 10.0 | |
9 days ago | 6 days ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
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.
counter.dev
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Ask HN: Is Counter.dev Down?
> Rather than what looks to be an unproven pet project of some developer. If nobody is paying for it, there are no guarantees of uptime or support.
It's pay what you want. The project is running for three years already, let's see how things go with time.
Apologies for the long downtime. The issue is being resolved, see here for updates:
- https://github.com/ihucos/counter.dev/issues/124
- Ask HN: What do you use to track visitors on your blog?
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Looking for a free Google Analytics alternative for my side projects
- counter.dev -> Something that I need but it has a lack of accuracy and very tiny functionality.
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Show HN: Counter β Simple and Free Web Analytics
> Right, and being sessionStorage it's cleared on browser close, and the next time I visit I will be counted as another daily unique visitor right?
No! There are a few rudimentary mechanisms on top of each other if one of them fails as you described. The /track endpoint sets up http caching. So if sessionStorage fails, you still have that. Then there is also inspecting document.referrer. If it is the page you are already on, then it's definitely not a unique visit.
> (or why not just a cookie)
Because cookies are considered "bad". But technically basically just saving a boolean value on the cookie would not be worse from a privacy perspective than using sessionStorage for a boolean value.
> I personally would rather have the pages I visit use a self-hosted solution gather everything I do, instead of a third-party getting little data from many sites I use. If this script is used across many sites it can be checked server-side against my IP to get my usage. I can never verify what logs they keep and for how long.
That is a general problem with externally hosted services. You can audit the source code (https://github.com/ihucos/counter.dev) but there is not way to verify that my deployment is as stated. I heard a podcast once that web hosters could guarantee that a deployment is in a specific way and contains a specific code base revision. But such solutions unfortunately do not exist. If you really want to be sure self hosting is the way to go (but somewhat cumbersome)
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Simple alternative to Google Analytics
I think you can go with counter.dev
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Sensible blocking
I am providing a free and open source web analytics service: https://github.com/ihucos/counter.dev / counter.dev
- Counter.dev: Web Analytics made simple
- Counter: Free and Open Source, Privacy Respecting Web Analytics
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Introducing the Privacy Sandbox on Android
From their Github. β
Countly
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Which analytics tool do you use for your Android/iOS apps?
* [Countly](https://countly.com/)
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Solution for logging and viewing the logs remotely
I suggest you use Countly, they have a free edition (Community) also its Self-hosted.
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I built an open source Google Analytics alternative (free as in freedom and privacy-first, too!)
Happy cake day. Yeah, nowadays there are so many analytics variants out there: Swetrix, Plausible, offen, count.ly any many more.
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Want your dedicated (and managed) product analytics server?
Hello HN, founder of Countly (https://count.ly) here. As you might know, we are the creators of one of the first open-source product analytics platforms that has 10+ SDKs for mobile, desktop and web applications. We've been working on a new SaaS, myCountly, to help you launch your own Countly servers in any location, so your user data stays close to home.
We are going to do an alpha launch soon, and looking for alpha testers, please signup below if interested:
https://gocountly.typeform.com/to/ayGA2EOm
Some highlights of myCountly:
- Your dedicated, fully managed deployment(s), not a shared service
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Which crash reporting platform do you use for your Vue apps?
Is countly still operational? Can't connect to their website https://count.ly/
- Integration/extension/plugin system in Nodejs
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Self Hostable Open Source Alternatives to Commercial products
Countly (https://github.com/Countly/countly-server)
- Ask HN: Good open source alternatives to Google Analytics?
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Ask HN: Best alternatives to Google Analytics in 2021?
Always surprised more people donβt use countly. Runs nice in docker or digital ocean. https://count.ly. Been self hosting it for years with few issues.
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Open Source Analytics Stack: Bringing Control, Flexibility, and Data-Privacy to Your Analytics
Countly (website, GitHub) is also an open-source product analytics platform that is designed primarily for marketing organizations. It helps marketers track website information (website transactions, campaigns, and sources that led visitors to the website, etc.). Countly also collects real-time mobile analytics metrics like active users, time spent in-app, customer location, etc., in a unified view on your dashboard.
What are some alternatives?
GoatCounter - Easy web analytics. No tracking of personal data.
PostHog - π¦ PostHog provides open-source product analytics, session recording, feature flagging and A/B testing that you can self-host.
DevUtils-app - All-in-one Toolbox for Developers. Native macOS app.
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!
fugu - Fugu is simple, privacy-friendly, open-source and self-hostable product analytics. π‘
Umami - Umami is a simple, fast, privacy-focused alternative to Google Analytics.
Serposcope - Rank tracker for SEO
Snowplow - The enterprise-grade behavioral data engine (web, mobile, server-side, webhooks), running cloud-natively on AWS and GCP
Ahoy - Simple, powerful, first-party analytics for Rails
Rakam - π Collect customer event data from your apps. (Note that this project only includes the API collector, not the visualization platform)