Focused apps
Each app has a clear job: translate, monitor, browse docs, connect to PostgreSQL, open servers, create wrappers or run Linux environments.
Total.js native suite
TotalDesktop turns the daily work around Total.js into a focused suite of native apps: code, docs, servers, PostgreSQL, monitoring, localization, Linux workspaces and learning. Each tool is small enough to stay sharp, but together they feel like one serious developer platform.
Why it exists
A real project also needs docs, translations, servers, database work, monitoring, local environments, demos and learning material. TotalDesktop gives those jobs native surfaces that feel calm, fast and made for the ecosystem instead of glued together from generic tools.
Each app has a clear job: translate, monitor, browse docs, connect to PostgreSQL, open servers, create wrappers or run Linux environments.
The tools are designed around Total.js naming, patterns and workflows, so the suite feels intentional rather than like a random utility folder.
Most data stays on the device. Credentials, projects and configuration are controlled by the user unless a feature clearly connects to a chosen service.
Workflow
TotalDesktop is becoming the practical layer around the Total.js ecosystem: create the environment, build the app, document it, translate it, connect the database, deploy it, monitor it and keep learning.
TotalIDE and TotalVM cover the development base: native project work, Linux distros, Desktop and Server editions, and a clean Total.js environment.
TotalCode, TotalHub, TotalMaker and TotalResources keep coding, app packaging, web sessions and localization close to the workflow.
TotalShell, TotalPG and TotalMonitor help with servers, PostgreSQL and application health without leaving the native suite.
TotalDocs covers reference learning, while TotalCampus guides developers through a complete Total.js course with exercises and a real app.
The suite
TotalVM has its own product website, and TotalIDE will have one when it is ready. The rest of the catalog shares this home and a simple local-first privacy approach.

A localization workspace for Total.js projects: resources, translations, review, snapshots and team-friendly language work.

Fleet monitoring for Total.js apps: health, uptime, live status and calm operational visibility for production and staging.

A native companion for Total.js Code instances, projects and daily development sessions.

Native PostgreSQL workbench for connections, queries, browsing, editing and exports.

Total.js documentation in a focused native reader, with local caching and a calmer learning flow.

A native home for Total.js web apps, grouped workspaces, persistent sessions and quick access.

Beautiful native system information for terminal sessions, fully local and designed for daily use.

An SSH and SFTP workspace for servers, credentials, terminal sessions and remote files.

Create distributable native wrappers for Total.js web apps with icons, URLs and packaging.
Coming next
TotalDesktop can grow app by app because the brand, privacy model and product language are shared. New tools should feel like they were always meant to be here.
Total.js Developer Distro environments for macOS, with Desktop and Server editions.
Open TotalVM siteA dedicated development environment for building Total.js projects with focused tools, project insight and native workflow support.
A self-training app with a complete Total.js backend and frontend course, hands-on exercises and a real Tasker app built step by step.
Privacy
Most TotalDesktop apps follow the same simple rule: user data stays on the device unless the user explicitly connects to a service, server, database, Total.js instance or documentation source.
TotalDesktop apps do not collect personal data for advertising, analytics resale, cross-app tracking or profiling. The apps are designed for local work and store their configuration, projects, credentials, caches and preferences on the user's device unless a feature clearly requires a connection chosen by the user.
Depending on the app, local storage may include project metadata, server entries, database connection names, documentation cache, resource files, terminal appearance, workspace groups, app URLs, monitoring endpoints or generated project artifacts. This data remains under the user's control.
Some apps connect to user-selected services: Total.js apps, SSH servers, SFTP servers, PostgreSQL databases, documentation sources, package services, monitoring endpoints or App Store resources. Those connections are initiated to provide the feature requested by the user.
Credentials, tokens, connection details and private configuration are treated as user-controlled data. They are not sold or used for advertising. When an app connects to an external service, that service may process the connection according to its own privacy policy.
Select an app to view the specific privacy note for that tool.
Built by Spanish Total.js