We built a site called LuxPDF.com as an Open-Sourced, Free, Private alternative to FreeConvert/ILovePDF/PDFCandy. We offer almost 30 tools, all free, all completely private and open sourced.
We literally built this because one day I was helping my dads with FAFSA papers, and he didnt know how to convert his iPhone images (.HEIC) to PDF files. When he sent them to me I realized I couldn't trust any of these file converter websites with such sensitive files. They were all closed-sourced, paid, had ads written all over it, required logins, and some even stored the images on their servers. So I called a friend and we got to work, and built LuxPDF.com as a way to help students, small businesses, freelancers etc, to securely and freely convert and do basic PDF modifications.
The website is completely free with no logins/signups etc, we only make money through donations (BuyMeACoffee), and maybe sponsorships from bigger companies in the future (not as ads, but as a logo image with a link under the "Support Us" tab).
We really hope you enjoy it. We changed a lot over the past month, adding new tools, a different UI/color scheme to feel more professional, and more :)
I think Stirling PDF is a great product, but there meant for more Enterprise level users. LuxPDF is meant for very quick file conversions or modifications and is geared towards freelancers, students, small business etc.
> It's unfortunate I couldn't fit the full title "Free, Open-Sourced, Private, Unlimited PDF WebApp. No Registration. No paywalls. No Ads"
HAH!
Also, thanks a lot for building this utility. I've typically used mac's builtin "Preview" app to do some basic PDF operations like deleting some pages and merging two pdfs, but doing so on windows required using some sketchy websites.
I think the core audience for Stirling PDF is a lot different from ours. Stirling PDF looks like there built for enterprise users and big business. We built LuxPDF to be more for students, small business owners, freelancers, etc. To be honest we saw our site as an alternative to FreeConvert & PDFCandy, not for Stirling PDF.
No it's a very valid question, yes we did use Kiro IDE running on Claude 4 for some of the more complicated tools like Sort Pages (getting the UI, image preview etc) and some other tools. Developing this PDF WebApp was a lot more complicated than we thought so we had to resort to vibe coding for some functionality. We used Claude mostly for the tools and the "initial generation"/layout of the site.
We built a site called LuxPDF.com as an Open-Sourced, Free, Private alternative to FreeConvert/ILovePDF/PDFCandy. We offer almost 30 tools, all free, all completely private and open sourced.
We literally built this because one day I was helping my dads with FAFSA papers, and he didnt know how to convert his iPhone images (.HEIC) to PDF files. When he sent them to me I realized I couldn't trust any of these file converter websites with such sensitive files. They were all closed-sourced, paid, had ads written all over it, required logins, and some even stored the images on their servers. So I called a friend and we got to work, and built LuxPDF.com as a way to help students, small businesses, freelancers etc, to securely and freely convert and do basic PDF modifications.
The website is completely free with no logins/signups etc, we only make money through donations (BuyMeACoffee), and maybe sponsorships from bigger companies in the future (not as ads, but as a logo image with a link under the "Support Us" tab).
We really hope you enjoy it. We changed a lot over the past month, adding new tools, a different UI/color scheme to feel more professional, and more :)