swishjam
Plausible Analytics
| swishjam | Plausible Analytics | |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | 351 | |
| 176 | 27,070 | |
| 0.0% | 8.9% | |
| 9.9 | 9.8 | |
| about 2 years ago | 2 days ago | |
| Ruby | Elixir | |
| 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.
swishjam
Plausible Analytics
- Plausible Community Edition – Security related update
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Chris Banes' Skills Repo: Claude Code Meets Android Development
Also a small tooling aside — if you're tracking how often skills get used across your team (or just want analytics on your dev blog without the GDPR cookie banner dance), privacy-focused options like Umami or Plausible give you full data ownership and a much lighter footprint than Google Analytics. I migrated two side projects to Umami last year and haven't looked back.
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Migrating Off Google Analytics: Umami vs Plausible vs Fathom
So this post is about something I've been chewing on for months but finally moved on: ripping Google Analytics out of three side projects and picking a privacy-focused alternative. Specifically, I'll compare Umami, Plausible, and Fathom — the three I actually evaluated — and walk through the migration steps that worked for me.
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Traceway: MIT-licensed observability stack you can self-host in ~90s
Here's something better than that:
https://github.com/plausible/analytics
Elixir.
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Google Analytics Alternatives: Umami vs Plausible vs Fathom in 2026
Plausible is what I recommend when someone wants to set it up and forget about it. It's an EU-based company, the data stays in the EU, and they're very transparent about their infrastructure.
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Migrating from Google Analytics to Privacy-Focused Alternatives
Plausible is also open-source with a self-hosted option, but their cloud-hosted product is where most people land. It's polished, opinionated, and genuinely pleasant to use.
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Qwen 3 vs Llama 3: Configuring Local LLMs for Actual Performance
I've been using Umami for this — it's a self-hosted, privacy-focused analytics tool that doesn't require cookie banners and is fully GDPR-compliant out of the box. Compared to alternatives like Plausible (also excellent, but their hosted plan costs more) or Fathom (hosted-only, pricier), Umami hits a sweet spot of simplicity and zero cost if you self-host. You get clean dashboards showing endpoint usage, response times, and user patterns without shipping data to third parties.
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Building AhCalc: A Solar and Battery Sizing Calculator That Works
If you want lightweight analytics, use privacy-respecting tools and keep them optional. For example, Plausible (https://plausible.io/) is a common choice for simple, cookie-light analytics.
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Blocking AI Crawlers vs. Letting Them In: A Practical Defense Guide
Plausible is similar in philosophy but offers a hosted option if you don't want to manage infrastructure. It's also open source and GDPR compliant without cookies.
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Show HN: Arbory – Native iOS dashboard and widgets for Plausible Analytics
Hey HN.
Long-time lurker (2017) here, but finally something to post about.
I've been building an iOS companion app for Plausible over the past few months. There are some great ones out there already, but I have always wanted to try building an app first-hand. I'm quite proud of the end result, so I wanted to share it online to see if people would be interested in using it.
In case you don't know: Plausible Analytics (https://plausible.io/) is a privacy-friendly alternative to Google Analytics. You can self-host it or choose to use their SaaS platform.
I chose Plausible Analytics because of their business philosophy: Privacy should come first. Arbory is built to connect directly to Plausible (either SaaS or self-hosted).
Features include:
* iOS Liquid Glass-native dashboard displaying most of your website analytics.
What are some alternatives?
sitespeed.io - sitespeed.io is an open-source tool for comprehensive web performance analysis, enabling you to test, monitor, and optimize your website’s speed using real browsers in various environments.
PostHog - 🦔 PostHog is an all-in-one developer platform for building successful products. We offer product analytics, web analytics, session replay, error tracking, feature flags, experimentation, surveys, data warehouse, a CDP, and an AI product assistant to help debug your code, ship features faster, and keep all your usage and customer data in one stack.
medama - Self-hostable, privacy-focused website analytics.
Umami - Umami is a modern, privacy-focused analytics platform. An open-source alternative to Google Analytics, Mixpanel and Amplitude.
faenz - Faenz is the web analytics for smalls businesses and side projects.
Fathom Analytics - Fathom Lite. Simple, privacy-focused website analytics. Built with Golang & Preact.