Most open source tools
are invisible.
Not because they're bad.
Because nobody built a good way to find them.
"We got tired of waiting for someone else to fix this."
"Hours lost. Every time."
"One person.
A few weeks.
A real problem."
"A student in India who kept losing hours to the same broken search loop. GitHub. Reddit. Hacker News. Back to Google. Repeat."
"Every search engine optimizes for clicks. Every list goes stale. Every thread gets buried. Nobody was curating the open source ecosystem like it actually deserved."
"So we stopped looking for the solution and became it."
"1,284 tools. 41 categories. Zero funding. Zero team. Built with obsession and whatever free API credits we had left."
tools curated
categories
dev obsession
Ecosystem Map
Open source
runs the world.
Nobody told
the world.
"OSS Discovery exists to change that."
"One tool at a time."
"V1 is just the proof."
"The foundation is here. The data is real. V2 is being built — and it's going to be a different kind of product entirely."
"We're not ready to say more yet. But you'll want to be on the list."
"We're building in public."
Catch us where developers actually hang out.
GitHub
The actual code
YouTube
Build logs & demos
Community & tools
Design & updates
Product Hunt
When V2 ships
Hacker News
Show HN posts
Dev.to
Technical writeups
Discord
Community server
Newsletter
Weekly OSS finds
GitHub
The actual code
YouTube
Build logs & demos
Community & tools
Design & updates
Product Hunt
When V2 ships
Hacker News
Show HN posts
Dev.to
Technical writeups
Discord
Community server
Newsletter
Weekly OSS finds
"Got something to say?"
Tool suggestion. Bug report. Roast. Collab idea. We read everything.
"It's open source."
Use it. Break it. Make it better. That's the whole point.