Home » Monitoring and logging
EventSentry Light: When You Want to Know What Just Happened — Instantly Sometimes the question isn’t “what went wrong” — it’s *when* and *where*. On Windows, a lot of that info lives in Event Logs, performance counters, and the stuff you normally don’t check until it’s too late. EventSentry Light is built for that gap. It watches what your system is doing, alerts when things go sideways, and logs everything in a way that makes sense later.
It’s free, fast, and doesn’t pretend to be a full-blown
Open Web Analytics: Know Who Clicked, Without Sending It to Google Let’s face it — most web analytics tools these days want your data as much as you want the insights. Every dashboard feels like a tradeoff: visibility for surveillance. But what if you could get the numbers you need — visits, clicks, paths, conversions — without piping everything into someone else’s cloud? That’s what Open Web Analytics (OWA) is about. It’s open-source, self-hosted, and does most of what Google Analytics used to
LogExpert: Real-Time Log Monitoring Without the Noise Sometimes all that’s needed is a fast, responsive log viewer — something that handles huge files, shows new lines in real time, and helps you find what you’re looking for without scrolling for hours. That’s exactly what LogExpert does.
It’s not a full-blown SIEM or logging stack. It doesn’t collect, forward, or parse logs from a fleet of servers. But for local files — especially growing ones — it’s the tool you reach for when Notepad++ or ta
Graylog: Log Management That Doesn’t Feel Like Punishment Let’s be real — dealing with logs can get messy fast. You’ve got dozens (maybe hundreds) of sources: servers, firewalls, apps, containers. And most of them just dump logs somewhere and call it a day. Graylog steps in to bring order to the chaos.
It’s a self-hosted, open-source platform that ingests logs from everywhere — syslog, Windows, Docker, APIs — parses them, and lets you search, alert, and visualize exactly what’s happening in you