Hamza Abdul Wahab

Hamza Abdul Wahab is an independent developer who focuses on lightweight, command-line utilities designed to streamline everyday workflows within local-area networks. The publisher’s sole public offering, Bonjou, exemplifies this philosophy by packaging real-time LAN chat and peer-to-peer file transfer into a single, terminal-driven executable that runs on Windows without elevated rights or external dependencies. Typical use-cases include development teams that want to exchange snippets and binaries across lab machines without leaving the command prompt, school computer clubs that need a zero-config messenger during coding sessions, or small offices that prefer to keep sensitive drafts offline while still collaborating in real time. Because Bonjou operates entirely over the local subnet, it avoids cloud relays, requires no user accounts, and keeps traffic within the building’s switch, making it attractive to privacy-minded administrators who otherwise rely on USB keys or shared drives. The tool auto-discovers peers via multicast, lists active neighbors in a color-coded sidebar, and accepts drag-and-drop file paths that are instantly transferred with a progress bar rendered in ASCII. Hamza Abdul Wahab’s minimalist portfolio therefore sits in the intersection of network utilities, developer tools, and secure file-sharing categories, appealing to anyone who values speed, transparency, and keyboard-centric control. Bonjou is available for free on get.nero.com, where it is delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always installs the latest release, and can be pulled in bulk alongside other applications.

Bonjou

Terminal-based LAN chat and file transfer for local networks

Details