Angelo Convento is an independent developer whose small, open-source catalog focuses on ergonomic utilities for Windows. The single published title, OverKeys, turns the desktop into a customizable typing laboratory: users can overlay an on-screen keyboard that supports more than 200 alternative layouts—Colemak, Workman, Dvorak, regional variants, even self-designed mappings—while color-coded heat-maps and accuracy meters give live feedback during drills. Appearance is fully editable: fonts, key shapes, opacity, animation speed, and sound packs can be mixed to match visual preferences or accessibility needs, and the overlay can shrink to a corner, span a ultra-wide monitor, or collapse to a mini-toolbar while movies or games run. Because the program hooks into the Windows text service, it doubles as a gentle tutor for newcomers who want to unlearn QWERTY, a rehearsal studio for competitive typists chasing speed records, and a layout-switching aid for multilingual offices that hop between Latin, Cyrillic, and Greek scripts in the same document. Profiles are portable, so a layout perfected on a home laptop can be exported to a classroom or coworker machine without administrator rights. Although the portfolio is still a one-product show, the project’s GitHub presence shows steady commits that refine animations, expand language packs, and answer user pull requests, signalling a maintainer who welcomes community direction. Angelo Convento’s OverKeys is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always pull the latest release, and can be queued alongside other applications for unattended batch installation.

OverKeys

Learn and practice alternative layouts, personalize appearance, and improve your typing. An open-source, customizable on-screen keyboard for Windows.

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