The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning. Learn more →
Top 23 Organizer Open-Source Projects
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InfluxDB
Power Real-Time Data Analytics at Scale. Get real-time insights from all types of time series data with InfluxDB. Ingest, query, and analyze billions of data points in real-time with unbounded cardinality.
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WorkOS
The modern identity platform for B2B SaaS. The APIs are flexible and easy-to-use, supporting authentication, user identity, and complex enterprise features like SSO and SCIM provisioning.
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pMenu
pMenu is a free, open source, portable, modern, customizable start menu alternative. (by TMS-Namespace)
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composable-organizer
Composable Organizer is a organizer system made up of compartments of various sizes that can be joined together, as well as lids and trays.
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SaaSHub
SaaSHub - Software Alternatives and Reviews. SaaSHub helps you find the best software and product alternatives
Also, something that comes pretty close to what I want to do is stash. However, it doesn't handle ebooks, and my library is not nsfw and shouldn't rely on an external database (as no external database for my field of interest exists afaik). But stash ticks almost all the requirements.
Project mention: How to add documentation to your product life cycle | news.ycombinator.com | 2023-10-09
Over the past few months, we've built the Treehouse frontend framework into an elegant, quality outliner that's open source, extensible, and gives you control of your data. I’d like to share some of the design influences for the Treehouse frontend, which should give a sense of the unique direction Treehouse is going from here.
Project mention: Ask HN: What apps have you created for your own use? | news.ycombinator.com | 2023-12-12I created adult entertainment apps to organize and have fun with images and videos:
- RuGiVi: https://github.com/pronopython/rugivi - Browse your collection of images on an endless screen. Tested with more than 700.000 images at once!
- Fapel System: https://github.com/pronopython/fapel-system - Organize your adult images and videos by just using hardlinks and directories.
- TopZemen: https://github.com/pronopython/topzemen - Let the images float on your screen or rain down next to your browser window.
- Fplyr: https://github.com/pronopython/fplyr - An audio player to play moaning sounds in the background.
Everything for Ubuntu Linux and in parts also for Windows!
One day once I'm comfortable with cash again I'll continue with mine, It's a a reader server w/ an optional Metadata Server access.
Project mention: Ask HN: What apps have you created for your own use? | news.ycombinator.com | 2023-12-12I created adult entertainment apps to organize and have fun with images and videos:
- RuGiVi: https://github.com/pronopython/rugivi - Browse your collection of images on an endless screen. Tested with more than 700.000 images at once!
- Fapel System: https://github.com/pronopython/fapel-system - Organize your adult images and videos by just using hardlinks and directories.
- TopZemen: https://github.com/pronopython/topzemen - Let the images float on your screen or rain down next to your browser window.
- Fplyr: https://github.com/pronopython/fplyr - An audio player to play moaning sounds in the background.
Everything for Ubuntu Linux and in parts also for Windows!
Project mention: Show HN: Out-of-the-box text classification models | news.ycombinator.com | 2024-03-18This is fantastic, but as you note on your launch page, people are going to need custom topic taxonomies. We use several custom ones, maintained as YAML that non-technical users can edit.
I'm guessing from having been looking for a project like yours for a decade now, that it's that custom taxonomy problem that means most OOTB don't work for people, so they make their own which they don't open source because they ended up ... tailoring ... a topic text classifier for themselves.
The only thing I've found close to this "OOTB" is:
https://cloud.google.com/natural-language/docs/classifying-t...
https://cloud.google.com/natural-language/docs/categories#ca...
And, to be frank, I can't see why I'd send my confidential information to you when I can send it to Google. (Ahem!)
But the problem with theirs and yours is the OOTB categories are for a global topic set, something like Yahoo directory, rather than for a given discipline.
I've found the general lists, like LCM[^1] (what you really want is LCSH subject headings, not LCM[^2]), too broad for my business or personal content, while something like ACM[^3] is more what's needed for, say, computing related content.
For a firmwide knowledge base at a {field}-tech firm, you have a mix of the firm's focus field, and computing, and a broad scope fallback like you're starting with. Even libraries have their own topic hierarchy! [^4]. Plenty fields have controlled vocabularies[^6], and if you can't find one for a field, you can usually generate one by finding someone who is already classifying that field, and looking at their TOC. All of which is to say, to be generally useful, you have to let people BYOT (bring your own topics) for this.
For instance, we built our topic list based on combining a reference taxonomy for our field, a reference taxonomy for computing, a reference taxonomy for business books, and the Google NLP tool mentioned above.
There are occasional tools that try to match arbitrary documents to arbitrary hierarchies such as clerk [^5] but they are challenging for various reasons.
You have a note to contact you for different topics, but raising this here since so far (6 hours) you had no feedback, and I'm a big fan of what you're doing and the niche is underserved.
A couple other thoughts:
Aside from topics taxonomy or hierarchy, we've recently found that something like properties based classification proves needed when we're 10K+ to 100K+ short and long form content documents in the knowledge base. For instance, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colon_classification, that adds "facets" like time dimension. This is incredibly helpful for relevance while still being able to drill in and just browse a topics/branch/leaf.
I really like your "intent" classification, far more interesting than sentiment, since it could help separate blog posts from new articles, self-guided tutorials from reviews, and so on: Problem Solving, News, Informational, maybe?. Sifting these to focus a robust KB can be tremendously valuable.
Your privacy policy is by-and-large useless, since the information being classified is unlikely personal (PII) class, and more likely confidential or non-public (NPI) class.
You are, effectively, saying "let us have a copy of all info you're classifying", yet nowhere on your main site nor docs site do you explain how you actively prevent yourselves from seeing an API user's information.
Ideally your "architecture" would explain how you built it to be able to do the work without you being able to see the content, not just a "pinky swear we won't look" sort of promise. Many businesses have their own confidentiality and privacy policies. Those require looping in subprocessors, which is you, and right now you can't be used.
[^1]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Library_of_Congress_Classifica...
[^2]: https://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects.html
[^3]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ACM_Computing_Classification_S...
[^4]: https://www.ala.org/tools/topics/atoz
[^5]: https://github.com/blankenshipz/clerk/tree/main
[^6]: https://pitt.libguides.com/metadatadiscovery/controlledvocab...
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A note from our sponsor - WorkOS
workos.com | 26 Apr 2024
Index
What are some of the best open-source Organizer projects? This list will help you:
Project | Stars | |
---|---|---|
1 | stash | 8,168 |
2 | buku | 6,148 |
3 | void | 1,044 |
4 | mnamer | 719 |
5 | hoard | 466 |
6 | xbvr | 298 |
7 | homechart | 142 |
8 | treehouse | 133 |
9 | fs-curator | 91 |
10 | EzRO-gui | 73 |
11 | intag | 60 |
12 | rugivi | 59 |
13 | fileorganizer | 40 |
14 | fsweeper | 30 |
15 | TheReader | 30 |
16 | fapel-system | 24 |
17 | loreshelf | 20 |
18 | media_organizer | 14 |
19 | qtask | 13 |
20 | clerk | 10 |
21 | pMenu | 10 |
22 | composable-organizer | 6 |
23 | AniLife | 4 |
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