A curated directory of open-source applications built with the Ember.js framework.
Open Source Ember Apps is a curated directory that lists open-source web applications built with the Ember.js framework. It organizes these applications by the version of Ember.js they use, providing developers with a practical reference of real-world implementations. The project solves the problem of finding quality, production-grade examples to learn from or evaluate the framework's capabilities.
Ember.js developers seeking inspiration, learning resources, or examples of how the framework is used in production applications. It's also useful for teams evaluating Ember.js who want to see its application across different domains.
Developers choose this directory because it offers a centralized, version-specific catalog of vetted open-source Ember apps, saving time searching for quality examples. Its unique value is in demonstrating the framework's practical use and longevity through a diverse range of maintained projects.
A list of open source Ember apps
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Apps are organized by Ember.js version, allowing developers to quickly find relevant codebases for specific releases, as evident in the README's clear sections from Canary to older versions.
Includes a wide range of applications like Discourse for forums, Ghost Admin for CMS, and Rancher UI for dashboards, showcasing Ember's real-world applicability across domains.
Each entry provides direct links to source code on GitHub or GitLab, enabling immediate access for study, forking, or contribution without intermediaries.
Acts as a curated showcase to highlight the Ember ecosystem's strength, encouraging exploration of maintained projects like Ember Inspector and crates.io.
The list includes apps using very old Ember versions (e.g., 1.x series), which may be deprecated or no longer actively maintained, requiring users to verify currency.
Beyond app names and links, the directory offers no descriptions, ratings, or activity metrics, making it hard to assess quality or relevance without digging into each repo.
As a simple markdown list, it lacks search, filtering, or sorting features, which can make finding apps by domain or size cumbersome for large lists.