Corey Hayward maintains a focused portfolio centered on developer productivity tools, exemplified by the Input Typer for Command Palette, a lightweight extension that enables scripts and automations to inject keystrokes into any Windows application as though they were typed by the user. The utility is commonly deployed by power-users who need to populate web forms, trigger IDE shortcuts, or feed dynamic strings into legacy software that lacks a modern API, making it popular among testers, streamers, and RPA hobbyists who string together quick macros without writing custom drivers. Because the add-on sits inside the open-source Command Palette ecosystem, it integrates naturally with broader launcher workflows—users can summon the palette, type a short alias, and watch boilerplate code, credentials, or emoji sequences appear instantly in the target window. The codebase is maintained publicly on GitHub, encouraging pull requests that refine key-delay timing, add Unicode support, or expand localization, while releases are tagged for winget and other Windows package managers to simplify distribution. Corey Hayward’s broader catalog, though currently compact, follows the same philosophy of solving narrow, repeatable pain points with minimal overhead, positioning future utilities alongside the Input Typer as unobtrusive enhancements rather than full-scale applications. All of the publisher’s software, including Input Typer for Command Palette, is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are sourced from trusted Windows package repositories such as winget, always deliver the latest upstream build, and can be installed individually or in unattended batches.
Input Typer extension for the Command Palette allowing for typing text as if sent via the keyboard.
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