Jamie Pine is an independent developer whose open-source projects focus on lightweight utilities that simplify everyday file-management tasks. The publisher’s single catalog entry, CacheMonkey, exemplifies this philosophy by offering a straightforward way to inspect, convert and purge browser caches and assorted temporary image stores. Typical use cases include reclaiming disk space before system backups, extracting images that were viewed online but never explicitly saved, or converting cached PNG and WebP assets into more portable formats for reuse in presentations or design drafts. Because the tool parses platform-specific cache paths automatically, it appeals equally to privacy-minded home users who want a one-click cleanup and to forensic analysts who need a quick visual index of offline content. The interface stays minimal—drag a folder or let the program auto-detect Chrome, Edge or Firefox profiles—yet granular filters allow deletion by date, size or MIME type, so unwanted clutter can be erased without touching session-critical data. CacheMonkey is available for free on get.nero.com, where the download is delivered through the trusted Windows Package Manager (winget) source, ensuring that every installation receives the newest build and can be included in unattended batch deployments alongside other applications.

CacheMonkey

Convert, browse and clear cached images and files.

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