All posts tagged: dashboard

I was losing track of my self-hosted apps until I found this open-source dashboard

I was losing track of my self-hosted apps until I found this open-source dashboard

One of the first signs that things were getting out of hand was the day I needed to figure out which apps were running, and after opening Portainer, I still guessed the wrong port. At the time, I had self-hosted tools on my NAS and a small server. I had to remember the port numbers for each app or bookmark them, but I just wasn’t able to properly keep track. Even though my tools were not failing, the real issue was that I had so much difficulty finding what I’d already set up. I stumbled upon DockPeek while trying to fix a reverse proxy issue, and as soon as I installed and opened this open-source tool, it was clear I had found the solution I desperately needed. OS Windows, MacOS, Linux Price model Free Dockpeek is a lightweight, self-hosted Docker dashboard. It allows quick access to your containers and lets you open web interfaces, view logs, and monitor your ports. I just couldn’t see my setup Every app turned into a port number I had …

New Mexico public dashboard tracks PFAS in drinking water

New Mexico public dashboard tracks PFAS in drinking water

New Mexico state data shows that 15 public water systems exceed federal PFAS standards as sampling expands. In response, the New Mexico Environment Department (NMED) has introduced a statewide online dashboard that allows residents and water professionals to review PFAS testing data for drinking water across local public water systems. The tool marks a significant expansion of the state’s monitoring efforts and provides detailed sampling results system by system. Since the Emerging Contaminants Program (ECP) began in 2024, 523 public water systems in New Mexico have conducted sampling for per- and polyfluoroalkyl substances (PFAS). Of those, 15 systems reported concentrations above current federal drinking water limits. Statewide sampling reveals broader PFAS distribution New Mexico has 1,055 public water systems, 650 of which qualify for assistance under the ECP. According to state data, roughly 62% of systems are eligible for support, which includes testing and technical guidance. Around 81% of residents receive water from groundwater-based systems, while an estimated 170,000 people rely on private wells. The newly released data indicate that elevated PFAS levels are not …

Get ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and more in one dashboard for a flat

Get ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, and more in one dashboard for a flat $75

TL;DR: Get lifetime access to ChatPlayground AI for $74.97 with code SAVE4 through Feb. 22 (reg. $619) and compare outputs from 25+ leading AI models in one place. Credit: ChatPlayground AI If you’ve ever copied the same prompt into three different AI tools just to see which one gives the best answer, you’re not alone. Different models excel at different things — but juggling tabs and subscriptions gets old fast. ChatPlayground AI puts the top AI models in one place, so you can compare responses side by side without the back-and-forth. Until Feb. 22, a lifetime subscription is on sale for $74.97 when you enter promo code SAVE4 at checkout. GPT-4o, Claude Sonnet, Gemini, DeepSeek, Llama, Perplexity, and more — all in one clean interface. It’s built for people who iterate fast, test variations, and actually care about optimizing results. Mashable Deals By signing up, you agree to receive recurring automated SMS marketing messages from Mashable Deals at the number provided. Msg and data rates may apply. Up to 2 messages/day. Reply STOP to opt …

This single self-hosted dashboard replaced my entire monitoring setup

This single self-hosted dashboard replaced my entire monitoring setup

For years, I’ve self-hosted my automations, note apps, networking tools, and more. The more I self-hosted, the more fragmented my work became. Many days begin with navigating through several screens, windows, and dashboards to check the status of services, view system statistics, and confirm that none of my containers have stopped functioning overnight. These all changed when I started using Homepage. It didn’t replace any of my tools, but cut away the multiple windows, tabs, and screens by bringing all the most valuable information to a single page. It instantly replaced my most frequently used monitoring apps and made my days much calmer. Monitoring got easier the moment I stopped “checking” things Monitoring had always felt like a routine I must complete. I check Uptime Kuma, then Netdata or Glances, then Docker Desktop. These are all tools that I would recommend. The only downside was that they weren’t talking to each other, and checking them wasn’t a fast or fluid process. Yet, I had to go through the motions even when nothing was wrong. Homepage …