Cross-platform frameworks and tools for building native desktop applications using modern web or system languages.
Files is a graphical file manager designed to replace the default operating system explorer with a unified, highly configurable environment. It functions as an extensible storage aggregator, normalizing local, cloud, and remote network storage into a single, consistent interface. By hooking into the system shell, the application intercepts navigation requests to provide a seamless, integrated experience for managing diverse file systems. The application distinguishes itself through a dual-pane productivity environment that facilitates efficient cross-directory operations and drag-and-drop workflows. Users can control the interface through a searchable command palette and extensive keyboard shortcut customization, reducing reliance on traditional menu hierarchies. Furthermore, it features a metadata-based tagging system that decouples file organization from physical directory structures, allowing for flexible categorization and retrieval. Beyond core navigation, the platform supports a modular plugin architecture and integrated version control, enabling users to manage code repositories and extend functionality directly within the browser. The environment is highly personalized, offering a declarative configuration schema for managing visual themes, folder styling, and behavioral preferences. Users can also perform context-aware global searches and manage complex directory layouts through a tabbed interface.
Whatsie is a web application desktop wrapper designed to turn web interfaces, specifically messaging services, into standalone desktop applications. It provides a dedicated window environment with a custom icon and system tray integration. The project includes security and privacy layers such as password-protected session locking with automatic timeouts and the ability to purge persistent application data and web caches. It also features native hardware permission management for controlling camera and microphone access. The application supports native system notifications, file download handling, and visual customization including time-based theme switching and page zoom configuration. Administrative tasks and application state management are accessible through a command line interface.
Upscayl is a cross-platform desktop application designed to increase the resolution and visual quality of digital images using artificial intelligence. By executing all processing tasks locally on the user's machine, the software ensures that sensitive media files remain private and never leave the host system for cloud-based services. The application distinguishes itself through a hardware-agnostic architecture that offloads intensive rendering workloads directly to the local graphics unit. It utilizes a hardware abstraction layer to translate enhancement commands into instructions compatible with diverse graphics drivers and hardware configurations, ensuring consistent performance across Windows, macOS, and Linux. Beyond core image processing, the software includes utilities for managing system health and large-scale data operations. It features tools for diagnostic log aggregation, performance optimization, and state management to assist with troubleshooting. Additionally, the application supports reliable file handling through a segmented transfer protocol that manages large assets by splitting them into independent data chunks.
This project is a command-line utility and development framework designed to modify, extend, and customize the Spotify desktop client. It functions as a binary patching engine that injects custom scripts, stylesheets, and interface components directly into the host application, enabling users to alter visual themes and add new functionality. The tool distinguishes itself by providing a comprehensive development environment for building modular extensions and custom applications. It includes a hot-reloading pipeline for rapid iteration, a declarative library for constructing interactive UI panels, and deep integration with the player's internal state. Developers can manipulate playback controls, register global keyboard shortcuts, and create context-aware menus or tooltips that integrate seamlessly with the native interface. Beyond customization, the project offers robust administrative control over the client environment. It manages the full lifecycle of extensions and themes, provides automated backup and restoration of the original application state, and includes diagnostic tools like remote debugging and component inspection to facilitate troubleshooting. The project is distributed as a command-line interface, allowing users to manage configurations, apply modifications, and maintain compatibility with client updates through structured terminal commands.
Pear Desktop is a development framework designed for building and distributing cross-platform desktop software. It leverages web technologies and native system integration to enable the creation of applications that run consistently across multiple operating systems from a single codebase. The platform distinguishes itself through a modular plugin architecture and a comprehensive build toolchain. Developers can extend core functionality by creating isolated scripts that interact with the application through defined communication bridges, and use automated pipelines to bundle source code into native executable binaries. The framework also supports dynamic style injection, allowing for interface modifications at runtime without requiring a full application rebuild. The environment includes a suite of tools for maintaining software quality, such as headless browser automation for validating workflows and local previewing capabilities for verifying production builds. These features ensure that applications remain stable and perform as expected across different hardware platforms throughout the development lifecycle.
WindTerm is a cross-platform terminal emulator and integrated development environment designed for remote server management and system administration. It provides a centralized graphical interface for interacting with local and remote command-line environments, utilizing a low-level emulation engine to interpret ANSI escape sequences and render text streams. The application distinguishes itself through a multi-pane workspace that supports terminal session multiplexing, allowing users to organize multiple command windows and panes within a single interface. It features a modular architecture that supports plugin-based extensibility and employs an asynchronous process management model to decouple session lifecycles from the user interface, ensuring responsiveness during complex workflows. The software includes a comprehensive suite of tools for infrastructure automation and file management, supported by hardware-accelerated text rendering and a virtual terminal buffer for efficient data handling. It is built using the Qt framework to provide a consistent experience across different operating systems.
Expo is a universal mobile framework designed to build native iOS and Android applications from a single codebase using web-standard technologies. It provides a comprehensive development environment that includes a unified runtime for testing, cloud-based infrastructure for compiling and signing native binaries, and automated tools for managing the entire mobile release lifecycle, including app store submission. The framework distinguishes itself through a plugin-based native configuration engine that programmatically modifies project files, allowing developers to integrate native modules without manual intervention. It also features a file-based routing system that maps directory structures directly to navigation paths, and an over-the-air update service that enables the deployment of JavaScript and asset changes directly to user devices, bypassing traditional app store review cycles. Beyond these core capabilities, the platform offers a wide range of integrated services for managing project metadata, environment variables, and persistent data storage. It includes a robust set of UI components and utilities for handling hardware-level features such as camera access, geolocation, audio and video playback, and push notifications. Developers can also leverage managed cloud services to orchestrate custom build profiles and automate CI/CD workflows. The project is managed via a command-line interface that facilitates project setup, native module integration, and the generation of custom development builds. Documentation and tooling are provided to support both standalone applications and the integration of Expo into existing native projects.
This project is a comprehensive, curated collection of software resources designed for the macOS ecosystem. It serves as a centralized directory for discovering applications across a wide range of functional domains, including professional development, system management, and personal productivity. The directory distinguishes itself by offering a highly granular classification of tools that cater to specific technical and creative workflows. It highlights specialized software for software engineering, such as terminal emulators, version control clients, and API development tools, alongside a broad selection of utilities for system security, virtualization, and network analysis. Beyond technical requirements, the collection includes extensive categories for design, writing, and daily task management, ensuring a diverse range of software needs are addressed. The repository covers a vast capability surface, spanning from communication and file-sharing utilities to advanced document processing, media management, and privacy-focused browsing tools. It also features specialized sections for artificial intelligence agents, data recovery, and financial tracking, providing a holistic view of the available software landscape for the platform.