Tiki is very flexible full-featured multilingual content management system (CMS) which you can use “out-of-the-box” to build your own website (PWA or anything else you can imagine to access using a web browser).
It is a Free/Libre OpenSource Software (licensed under GNU/LGPL) which is being released every 8 months under the Tiki Wiki CMS Groupware project. Tiki is a "wiki-way" all-in-one application powered by PHP, MySQL, Zend Framework, jQuery, Bootstrap and Smarty. Actively developed by large international community of contributors and translated in over 40 languages Tiki can be used to create all sorts of web-based applications like blogs, news sites, portals, knowledge bases, community wikis, company intranets or extranets.
Tiki offers a very large number of features out-of-the-box. Arguably more than any other Open Source Web Application. Highly configurable & modular, all the features are optional and easily administered via any web browser.
Major features include a robust wiki engine, news articles, discussion forums, newsletters, blogs, a file/image gallery, data tracker (e.g. for bug & issues, form generator), a links directory, polls/surveys and quizzes, a FAQ, a banner management system, a calendar, geolocation with maps, RSS feeds, a category system, tags, an advanced templating system, inter-user messages, a menu generator, a powerful user, group and permission system, internal search engine, external authentication support, and much more.
Based on our record, Mail-in-a-box seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 116 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Mail-In-a-Box (MIAB)[1] comes with a built in nameserver. I think you may use it as a standalone DNS even for the domain names whose email is not managed by MIAB. Not sure about any benefit of doing it this way though. [1] https://mailinabox.email. - Source: Hacker News / 14 days ago
I've been using https://mailinabox.email on a small VPS where I host a few other websites and projects. I'd recommend it for the management aspect: It has backup scripts and a UI for let's encrypt and dns entries. - Source: Hacker News / 4 months ago
I don't see why we are a long way away. At the sandstorm end, we need to get to the point, where all updates (of both sandstorm and the apps) on the user machine are automatic. Much like they are automatic on various OSes (mobile OSes in particular but also MacOS/Windows). This is not impossible if a single OS like Debian-testing is targeted. Mailinabox [1] almost does it. They target Ubuntu stable, and upgrades... - Source: Hacker News / 7 months ago
If you have a better solution, for example a good provider who offer agency packages which allows many domains and there is no catch, for example very small disk space, then hit me right away. Otherwise, please share your experience with hosting your own mail service. I found https://mailinabox.email/ and https://www.iredmail.org/ for example, but never had any experience with neither of them. Source: 11 months ago
Mailinabox.email works great on a basic vps. Source: 12 months ago
mailcow - An open source mailserver suite.
DokuWiki - DokuWiki is a simple to use and highly versatile Open Source wiki software that doesn't require a database.
iRedMail - A fully fledged, free email server solution, an open source project (GPL v2).
MediaWiki - MediaWiki is a free software wiki package written in PHP, originally for use on Wikipedia.
Modoboa - Modoboa is a mail hosting and management platform including a modern and simplified Web User Interface.
WordPress - WordPress is web software you can use to create a beautiful website or blog. We like to say that WordPress is both free and priceless at the same time.