Categories: Toolbox

How To Tell Which Tech Stack A Website is Using

If you are a web developer you may always wonder which tech stacks a website is using when came across a site that is either your competitors’ or simply looks great and attractive. SiteStacks got you covered with a free search tool that reveals that info for you.

The tool scans the website you provided and reveals the tech stacks used on that website, from server setup to other valuable info such as analytics platforms, social media tools, advertising tech, email, CMS platform, eCommerce platform, etc.

Head over to its homepage, type in the website’s address in the search box and hit Lookup button to start the search.

Depending on the size of the website you are trying to search, it could take a few minutes to get the result back. When it does, it provides a unique link assigned to that website so you can easily get back to it later on if needed.

Each tech section has a link that links to its technical review page on Siftery, a user-powered tech review site. This lets you read more about the service to learn who’s using it, what it offers, and if you might want to use it yourself.

Through a few tests I threw at it, I can’t tell it covers all tech stacks a website has implemented but pretty close. You can definitely use it as a start point.

edge

Share
Published by
edge
Tags: Web App

Recent Posts

Disable Copilot on Windows 11 via Group Policy GPO

If using Copilot right from the Taskbar isn't your thing, you should disable it. Even…

8 months ago

Setting Default Fonts in Word, Excel, Outlook, and PowerPoint via Group Policy

In an environment where standardizing things does matter, setting default fonts in Microsoft Office apps…

9 months ago

Wake-On-LAN (WOL) with Windows and PowerShell

Wake-On-LAN is a networking standard that lets you wake up a computer from either a…

9 months ago

How To Remove Restrictions Set in A Password-Protected PDF File

First of all, this is not to bypass a PDF file that requires a password…

9 months ago

How To Move My Outlook Navigation Bar Back From Left Back To the Bottom

Microsoft has been lurking about the idea of placing the Outlook navigation bar to the…

2 years ago

Headset with Microphone Echoing My Own Voice on Windows, What To Do?

One colleague came up to me the other day asking me to take look at…

2 years ago