Home » Automation and scripts
TinyTask: Because Sometimes You Just Need to Record and Repeat There’s beauty in tools that don’t try to be more than they are. TinyTask is exactly that — a micro-sized automation tool that records what you do and plays it back. No scripting, no setup, no learning curve. Just hit record, do your thing, and let it repeat forever (or until you stop it).
It’s one of those programs you don’t think about — until you’re stuck clicking the same 5 buttons fifty times. Then suddenly, TinyTask makes perf
Project Mercury: Because Every Millisecond Counts on a Busy Desktop Sometimes the lag isn’t in the app — it’s in the way the system handles windows, redraws, and focus shifts. Especially on older machines or in cluttered workspaces, switching between windows can feel stickier than it should. It’s subtle, but it slows everything down.
That’s where Project Mercury comes into play. It doesn’t boost CPU. It doesn’t touch RAM. Instead, it tweaks how Windows handles focus, redraw latency, and input r
Clavier+: Because Repeating Yourself Gets Old Really Fast There’s something about typing the same thing over and over — it chips away at focus. Opening the same folder. Launching the same app. Filling in the same phrases. It’s not hard work, it’s just *annoying*. That’s where Clavier+ earns its keep.
This little utility doesn’t try to run scripts across the enterprise or automate servers. Instead, it gives hotkeys real muscle. Want to open a tool, paste some text, or trigger a script — with jus
Actiona: When You Just Need the Computer to Do the Boring Stuff for You There’s always that one task — clicking the same buttons, typing the same credentials, moving the mouse a few pixels over and over. Maybe it’s part of testing, maybe just keeping a workstation in check. Either way, nobody wants to babysit a keyboard for things that could be automated. That’s where Actiona comes in.
It’s not trying to be some big cloud platform. In fact, it doesn’t even need the internet. It just sits quietl