#vue#awesome#dashboard#docker#hacktoberfest#homelab#homepage#mit#nodejs#organization#productivity#pwa#self_hosted#startpage#vue
Dashy is a free, open-source dashboard that lets you organize and access all your self-hosted services, apps, and web links from one central place, making it easy to manage and monitor everything you use regularly[1][2][4]. It comes with over 50 pre-built widgets for things like system monitoring, news, weather, and productivity, and you can customize the look and layout with themes, icons, and different views[4][5]. The main benefit is that Dashy saves you time and hassle by giving you a single, user-friendly page to launch and check on all your important services, with features like instant search, status indicators, and multi-language support[4][5].
https://github.com/Lissy93/dashy
#go#docker#golang#media_streaming#remote_control#remote_desktop#self_hosted#virtual_browser#vue#webrtc
Neko is a self-hosted virtual browser that runs inside a Docker container and streams via WebRTC, letting you securely and privately access a full browser or desktop environment from anywhere. It supports multiple users at once, making it great for team collaboration, shared browsing, watch parties, and interactive presentations. You can run various browsers like Firefox, Chrome, or Tor, and even other Linux apps. Neko keeps your data safe by isolating the browser environment, avoids leaving traces on your device, and supports smooth video and audio streaming. This gives you flexible, secure, and private web access with easy sharing and real-time interaction.
https://github.com/m1k1o/neko
#cplusplus#c_plus_plus#cpp#datachannel#libdatachannel#libnice#p2p#peer_to_peer#peerconnection#rfc_8831#rfc_8834#rtcdatachannel#rtcpeerconnection#sctp#webrtc#webrtc_datachannel#webrtc_video#websocket
libdatachannel is a lightweight, easy-to-use C/C++ library that lets you add real-time peer-to-peer data, media, and WebSocket communication to your apps across many platforms like Linux, Windows, macOS, Android, and iOS. It simplifies WebRTC by providing a smaller, simpler alternative to Google's library, with compatibility for browsers like Firefox and Chrome. You can use it to connect native apps directly to web browsers with minimal dependencies, supporting secure connections via GnuTLS, Mbed TLS, or OpenSSL. It also supports compiling to WebAssembly for browser use, making it flexible for cross-platform real-time communication development[1][4]. This helps you build fast, efficient apps for video, audio, or data sharing without heavy libraries.
https://github.com/paullouisageneau/libdatachannel