GIT_FEED

micasa-dev/micasa

A modal TUI for tracking home projects, maintenance schedules, appliances, and vendor quotes.

View on GitHub

What it does

micasa is a keyboard-driven desktop app that lives in your terminal and helps homeowners track everything about their house — maintenance schedules, repair projects, appliance warranties, contractor quotes, and incident logs — all stored in a single local file with no cloud account required. It also lets you ask plain-English questions about your home data, with an AI assistant that runs entirely on your own computer interpreting your requests and pulling the answers.

Why it matters

This project taps into a clear consumer pain point — home management is fragmented across sticky notes, email threads, and fading memory — and bets that privacy-first, offline-first tools have a real audience as subscription fatigue grows. For founders and investors, it's a signal that 'local AI' as a product feature (where the intelligence runs on your machine, not a remote server) is moving beyond developer toys into everyday utility software.

44Hot

Gaining traction — heating up

Stars
1.2k
Forks
51
Contributors
5
Language
Go

Score updated Feb 26, 2026

Related projects

AERIS-10 is an open-source radar system that can detect and track objects — like drones or aircraft — up to 20 kilometers away, built with off-the-shelf components at a fraction of the cost of commercial radar systems. It comes as a complete package including the physical hardware designs, circuit boards, and software, so researchers or companies can build, modify, and deploy their own working radar.

// why it matters Radar technology has historically been locked behind defense contractors and million-dollar price tags, but this project opens the door for drone startups, security companies, and research teams to build radar-enabled products without prohibitive hardware costs. With nearly 15,000 stars and over 3,000 forks, there's clearly a large and active market of builders looking for exactly this kind of accessible sensing infrastructure.

PLSQL17.4k stars4.1k forks3 contrib

Kana Dojo is a free, open-source website for learning Japanese, taking design inspiration from popular apps like Duolingo and Monkeytype to create a clean, visually appealing learning experience. It focuses on teaching kana, the foundational Japanese writing systems, through an accessible and aesthetically polished interface.

// why it matters With nearly 500 contributors and almost 900 forks, this project demonstrates strong community-driven product development — a valuable proof point that language learning remains a high-engagement, high-demand category ripe for innovation beyond dominant players like Duolingo. For founders and investors, it signals an appetite for beautifully designed, niche language tools that can attract passionate contributor communities and loyal users without heavy marketing spend.

TypeScript2.1k stars1.7k forks1095 contrib

This repository serves as the official hub for Obsidian's public releases and its community-built plugins and themes directory. Obsidian is a popular note-taking and knowledge management app, and this repo is where thousands of community contributors submit and maintain add-ons that extend its functionality.

// why it matters With over 2,600 contributors and 15,000+ stars, this repo signals a thriving third-party ecosystem around Obsidian — a strong indicator of deep user engagement and platform lock-in that rivals and investors should watch. For builders, it illustrates how a closed-core product can still cultivate massive community ownership through an open plugin marketplace, a powerful product strategy worth emulating.

17.0k stars6.5k forks2657 contrib

First Contributions is a beginner-friendly training ground that teaches people how to make their first contribution to open-source software projects using a simple, guided practice exercise. It walks newcomers through the standard process of submitting changes to a shared codebase, available in dozens of languages to reach a global audience.

// why it matters With over 16,000 contributors and nearly 100,000 forks, this project represents a massive pipeline of developers taking their first steps into collaborative software development — a key talent and community-building signal. For founders and open-source maintainers, it highlights the growing global appetite for contribution culture, which can directly feed contributor bases, developer communities, and ecosystem growth around a product.

53.6k stars101.5k forks17185 contrib
// SUBSCRIBE

The repos that moved this week, why they matter, and what to watch next. One email. No noise.