Dec 26, 2025 @ 7:00 am
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I’ll start this with a big disclaimer: I’m not you. What I think is cool to self-host might seem uninteresting and vice-versa.
But I’m always interested to see what others are hosting. Not long ago, LowEndTalk member @vitobotta started a great thread listing what he self-hosted and invited others to share their lists. It reminded me of the venerable [Awesome-Selfhosted list](https://github.com/awesome-s…
Dec 26, 2025 @ 7:00 am
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I’ll start this with a big disclaimer: I’m not you. What I think is cool to self-host might seem uninteresting and vice-versa.
But I’m always interested to see what others are hosting. Not long ago, LowEndTalk member @vitobotta started a great thread listing what he self-hosted and invited others to share their lists. It reminded me of the venerable Awesome-Selfhosted list on GitHub, which has hundreds and hundreds of apps in dozens of categories to choose from.
Here’s some I use:
- Monica – a “personal CRM” that allows you to track birthdays, events, calls, contacts, etc. among your friends, family, and personal life.
- Uptime Kuma – a great and easy to use monitoring app
- Change detection – lets me know when certain pages have changed.
- Jupyter – a really nice research notebook. The world is drowning in note taking and note management solutions, but this one has an embedded Python engine.
- Serpbear – to track how various sites are performing with various keywords.
A couple I’m planning to try soon:
- Snipe-IT – a poor man’s ServiceNow CMDB
- ExcaliDraw – a charting/drawing app
Some of these I self-host, and others I host on PikaPods, which has many apps.
What are you hosting in 2026? Let us know in the comments below!
Raindog308 is a longtime LowEndTalk community administrator, technical writer, and self-described techno polymath. With deep roots in the *nix world, he has a passion for systems both modern and vintage, ranging from Unix, Perl, Python, and Golang to shell scripting and mainframe-era operating systems like MVS. He’s equally comfortable with relational database systems, having spent years working with Oracle, PostgreSQL, and MySQL.
As an avid user of LowEndBox providers, Raindog runs an empire of LEBs, from tiny boxes for VPNs, to mid-sized instances for application hosting, and heavyweight servers for data storage and complex databases. He brings both technical rigor and real-world experience to every piece he writes.
Beyond the command line, Raindog is a lover of German Shepherds, high-quality knives, target shooting, theology, tabletop RPGs, and hiking in deep, quiet forests.
His goal with every article is to help users, from beginners to seasoned sysadmins, get more value, performance, and enjoyment out of their infrastructure.
You can find him daily in the forums at LowEndTalk under the handle @raindog308.