June - Github Trending Newcomers

A guided tour of the most interesting GitHub repositories published over the past month.
This selection has been carefully curated by tracking repositories created after June 1st, based on their fastest growth trends — including stars, downloads, and community adoption.
Preview:
- Agents Towards Production – Turn your AI agents into real-world products. A must-read, open-source playbook. 🤖
- Liquid Glass React – Bring Apple's liquid glass effects to your React applications. ✨
- Shit – GitHub's billionth repository is out and it's shit! At least that's what the README says. 💩
- OpenCut – A free and easy-to-use open-source video editor for web, desktop, and mobile, and a great alternative to CapCut. 🎬
- OpenList – A file listing and management tool that allows you to mount multiple cloud storage services and present them through a unified web interface. 📁
Agents Towards Production 🤖
For those living under a rock at the moment and who managed to escape the AI overhype, let me tell you that AI agents are a very hot topic — and for good reason. They open up new ways to design and build products or services, which is always thrilling for a passionate computer science guy like me.
However, finding proper ways to scale them and put them into production can be a real nightmare, especially since this is a new and fast-evolving field. You often end up struggling to find the right resources or readings to get you on track.
And this is where the Agents Towards Production repository comes in handy. It’s an open-source playbook for building and deploying AI agents in production. It covers tools like LangGraph and LangSmith, agent architectures, monitoring, and observability.
The repository has been highly praised by the community and awarded thousands of stars in just a few days for turning experimental agents into scalable products. It’s perfect for developers working with LLMs and GenAI systems, as it’s well-documented with real-world, code-first examples.
Liquid Glass React ✨
Apple recently unveiled its new "liquid glass" effect, which stood out as a key highlight of their latest keynote.
Liquid Glass React is a React component library that helps you replicate Apple’s new “liquid glass” UI effect and easily integrate it into your web applications. Features include frosted blur, light distortion, refraction, and chromatic highlights.
It’s fully customizable and supports arbitrary content within the glass effect, making it ideal for adding a premium, modern feel to React apps. Note that Safari and Firefox support is still partial due to current browser limitations.
Shit 💩
GitHub’s billionth repository dropped on June 11th, 2025 — and, fittingly, it’s literally called “shit.” Its only file is a README containing just one word: “shit.”
Created by AasishPokhrel, it went viral almost instantly, gaining thousands of stars within a week. The repository also features a growing list of hilarious issues, which I highly recommend checking out if you’re in the mood for a geeky laugh.
GitHub even officially congratulated the creator via an issue. It’s a minimalist joke turned viral sensation — and now a quirky piece of open-source history. A perfect symbol of developer humor and impeccable timing.
OpenCut 🎬
OpenCut is a free, open-source video editor built for web, desktop, and mobile platforms. It’s designed as an alternative to CapCut, which has progressively placed many basic features behind a paywall.
OpenCut offers an intuitive UI, no watermarks, and local processing for enhanced privacy. It supports all core editing features—cutting, trimming, effects, and exporting. With full cross-platform compatibility, it’s perfect for creators on the go. The project is actively maintained and welcomes contributions from the community.
OpenList 📁
OpenList is a unified file management tool that allows you to mount and manage multiple cloud services—including Google Drive, Dropbox, WebDAV, S3, and more—through a clean, intuitive web interface.
It’s designed as a drop-in replacement for AList, and aim to offer long-term governance, full transparency, and no hidden risks. OpenList was built to protect open source from trust-based vulnerabilities and potential abandonment.
While not yet fully stable, the project is backed by an active community of strong contributors. (You can find more information about the migration schedule here.)
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