The bootstrapper's EU stack for under €10 per month

(eualternative.eu)

108 points | by sparkling 2 hours ago ago

31 comments

  • BrunoBernardino 8 minutes ago ago

    As someone who tries to "buy local", I have been a happy customer of the following recommended services for many months or years:

    - Hetzner (Cloud)

    - Brave (for transactional emails)

    - Mollie

    For monitoring I use and recommend UpDown.io!

    • port11 2 minutes ago ago

      I think you mean Brevo instead of Brave? Previously known by the (much better) name SendInBlue.

  • CodesInChaos 16 minutes ago ago

    > passkeys, the modern way to handle login that gets rid of password resets entirely

    Doesn't that just trade password resets for passkey resets? Or do they permanently lock out users who lose their passkey?

    • port11 3 minutes ago ago

      Passkeys cannot be cryptographically reset, but plenty of providers have account recovery flows in case you lose your passkey. Without a recovery mechanism you’d be technically locked out, that’s true.

    • iknowstuff 7 minutes ago ago

      Yeah you just allow setting a new passkey by sending an email link, just like password resets. Passkeys don't have to be remembered, can't be phished, and don't need 2FA.

    • Fire-Dragon-DoL 10 minutes ago ago

      The second one

  • redfloatplane an hour ago ago

    I know it's boring to comment and say that something sounds like it was written by an AI, but this sounds like it was written by an AI. I am often especially suspicious of these listicle recommendation sites because it's pretty cheap and easy to have dozens of sites doing some list which just so happens to mention a specific service that 'quietly' does a 'surprisingly good job' of some doodad. This kind of submarine advertising feels like it might be quite common. Although in this case it seems they're trying more for a 'sponsorship' thing - 'our website got X views in Y days, sponsor us, random company!'

    • sjdrc 40 minutes ago ago

      The use of the word genuinely is always a dead giveaway

      • ant6n 20 minutes ago ago

        It genuinely is.

  • satvikpendem an hour ago ago

    On Herzner add Dokploy (Honduras, I prefer this even if it's not European) or Coolify (Hungary) to get a Vercel-like PaaS experience for free. Any others that are good?

    • czhu12 17 minutes ago ago

      We've been building canine.sh free and open source for an enterprise ready deployment platform.

      Think about it like coolify is to a VPS as Canine is to Kubernetes.

    • ExpertAdvisor01 12 minutes ago ago

      Look at lowendtalk/box

  • thinkindie an hour ago ago

    this website seems a clone of https://european-alternatives.eu/

    Either way, one of the most critical parts is that many are still hosting on Google Cloud, AWS or Microsoft, therefore you are not 100% insulated from Cloud Act.

    • fmbb an hour ago ago

      A lot of the alternatives there are tagged "EU hosted". Some are not.

      Are the ones that are tagged "EU hosted" among the ones you mean host on Google Cloud, AWS or Microsoft?

      • thinkindie 25 minutes ago ago

        Take Tally (tally.so), the one I took the time to check.

        In their footer they say: Made and hosted in the EU which technically it's not wrong, but since they are using Google Cloud and Cloudflare, they are not insulated from the effect of the CLOUD Act.

  • hollow-moe 16 minutes ago ago

    Have a look to OVH VPS their offers are real cheap and if you're not scarred of openstack they have this too.

  • FlxMgdnz an hour ago ago

    Thanks for listing Hanko as EU-based authentication provider.

    To be upfront about this, we’re still on AWS (Frankfurt), but "EU-owned" hosting/data regions will be available very soon.

  • byyll an hour ago ago

    I don't think that's an alternative to US hyperscalers. Scaleway is the closest thing there is. Replacing a single service with 10 others is not really an alternative in my opinion.

    • fmbb an hour ago ago

      Not putting all your eggs in one basket is a good choice. I think the AWS service catalog makes you adopt more than you need or want anyway, it is a great way of locking people into one vendor.

    • veselin an hour ago ago

      I would argue that with AI, this becomes less of an issue. Connect N services, deploy to bare metal. Granted, AI is an additional cost now local or remote. But so is the MacBook people use to develop their software.

  • kevinkatzke 40 minutes ago ago

    Happy to see my friends from Hanko on the list, they are great and you should really try their privacy-first authentication.

  • embedding-shape an hour ago ago

    What about DNS buying/hosting? Seems it's not mentioned (neither is emailing besides transactional/marketing). I'm currently on DNSimple but been trying to replace it with some closer to home (Europe) alternative that still offers the same level of possible automation as DNSimple does, anyone know of any that fits the bill?

    • mnahkies an hour ago ago

      It's not European, rather a New Zealand company but I find https://zonomi.com/ pretty good. There's a Lego resolver that works fine https://github.com/go-acme/lego - although my only complaint is the DNS propagation takes a while though I suspect that's a my config problem (dig will show the txt record long before Lego sees it)

      • SyneRyder 43 minutes ago ago

        Wow, I'd never heard of Zonomi, or RimuHosting (which appears to be the parent company). Data centers in NZ & Oz & UK & Germany, and the website gives me the vibe of those customer focused companies of the late 90s / early 2000s, probably because they started in 2002. Pricing is a little more than I'd like, but I'm just pleased to see alternatives like this in Oceania.

        Thanks for sharing! Bookmarked immediately.

    • panja 10 minutes ago ago

      Bunny.net is based in Europe

    • seszett an hour ago ago

      OVH is one of the cheapest and works satisfactorily for me. I went back to OVH when Gandi stopped being a recommendable company.

      OVH's API allows full control of an account, but I don't know how that compares to DNSimple.

    • byyll an hour ago ago

      ClouDNS is probably the most popular one.

  • pickleballcourt an hour ago ago

    Haven’t used herzner but heard good things

  • gitowiec an hour ago ago

    I thought I will find GetResponse there, but they are fucking greedy!

  • zuzululu an hour ago ago

    any good reason to serve the EU? I am observing through various SaaS and support tickets and EU seem no average way more finicky and stingy than North American customers not to mention the absurd level of EU regulations you have to follow just to serve the same product at a much higher cost.

    It's like a bad mix of culture (bordering on arrogance and pathological in some bad cases) and over regulation.

    I always advise clients to avoid the EU at launch and focus on UK if they really want to do a test run and encourage them to focus on East Asia instead.

    You'd think Europe is this affluent and sophisticated customer demographic but again and again from data I see it couldn't be further from the truth.

    • lstodd 43 minutes ago ago

      Maybe your product is just not an acceptable fit to EU customers?

      (as in "you are pushing shite no one wants but not accustomized to getting a well-deserved push-back")