Benjamin Demetz is an independent open-source developer whose public catalog currently centers on Tooka, a lightweight, rule-driven command-line utility engineered to bring automated order to cluttered folders. Written with speed and minimal resource use in mind, Tooka lets users declare simple pattern–action pairs—such as moving all PDFs into “Documents”, grouping photos by creation month, or renaming camera dumps on the fly—and then executes the entire workflow in milliseconds. Because everything is defined in plain text configuration files, the tool slots naturally into developer and power-user environments where repeatable, scriptable housekeeping is valued over graphical file managers. Typical use cases include tidying massive download directories after coursework submissions, reorganizing archival drives for media servers, standardizing naming conventions across team shared folders, or preparing file trees for cloud upload without manual drag-and-drop. Although the portfolio presently consists of this single CLI organizer, the publisher’s GitHub presence suggests an emphasis on small, focused utilities that solve everyday workflow friction without feature bloat. Benjamin Demetz’s software is available free of charge on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always fetch the latest release, and support batch installation alongside other applications.
A fast, rule-based CLI tool for organizing your files
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