Free and MIT licensed
Open source tools you can inspect, fork, host, and adapt without a vendor permission loop.
A family of small tools and libraries for writing, planning, drawing, chat, meetings, analytics, uptime, logs, and product work.
Use them locally when the work is private. Host them yourself when a team needs to share it.
Free MIT software. Instant load time. Sub-100kb apps. Clean modern design. Minimal resources.
Five local-first apps are available online now. Open one, make something, and export your work when you need to move it.
The Mikro family uses a design philosophy that aims to be to-the-point, calm, subtle, modern, and useful, without any bells and whistles or distracting interface flair.
MikroSuite is built around instant-loading, sub-250kb apps with conventional setup, clean modern interfaces, and minimal runtime requirements.
Open source tools you can inspect, fork, host, and adapt without a vendor permission loop.
Instant load time by design: plain browser surfaces, tiny bundles, and no heavy platform shell.
Apps stay under 250kb, keeping deploys simple and interfaces quick on ordinary devices.
Works in any modern browser, with conventional setup and minimal resources on self-hosted installs.
The design goal is not to build another work platform. It is to make useful software that stays understandable after installation.
Run the server when the job needs a server. Keep browser-local work in the browser. Move data out in ordinary formats.
IndexedDB, SQLite, NDJSON, CSV, JSON, Markdown. The data layer should be understandable after the branding fades.
Plain browser surfaces, restrained dependencies, and a narrow shape for each narrow piece of work.
No surprise tracking, engagement loops, or analytics theater. Useful software does not need to watch you work.
Each Mikro tool and library keeps its own shape, storage model, and installation path.
Fast local boards for diagrams, notes, sketches, and exportable visual thinking.
A calm Markdown workspace with local documents, search, backlinks, and export.
Small Kanban boards with portable backups and optional sync when a team needs it.
Local workbooks for grids, formulas, typed tables, saved views, and CSV/JSON exchange.
Dead-simple magic link authentication for small Node services.
Tiny JavaScript comparison helpers for simple equality work.
Type-safe configuration loading for small Node apps.
A lightweight key-value database inspired by KV stores.
Small format conversion helpers for JavaScript projects.
Zero-dependency string hashing helpers.
Lightweight customizable ID generation.
JSON logging built for Lambda-style runtimes.
AWS Embedded Metric Format helpers for Lambda metrics.
Simple browser storage encryption helpers.
Minimal API server utilities built on Node primitives.
Lightweight HMAC request signing.
JSON tracing helpers for serverless services.
Small JSON validation for JavaScript objects.