Marko19907 is an independent developer whose compact utility portfolio centers on solving niche but irritating hardware problems that mainstream vendors overlook. The publisher’s single public offering, OLEDShift, exemplifies this philosophy: a lightweight, open-source system-tray agent that imperceptibly nudges on-screen windows by a few pixels every few minutes, eliminating the static-image retention that can permanently scar expensive OLED monitors and televisions after long work or gaming sessions. Typical users include traders who keep Bloomberg terminals open overnight, video editors who park timelines for hours, or flight-sim enthusiasts whose HUD elements would otherwise etch themselves into high-end panels. Because the program manipulates only window coordinates and never injects into other processes, it runs safely alongside corporate MDM suites, games with anti-cheat engines, or color-critical applications that prohibit full-screen overlays. Written in C# with a MIT license, the executable is tiny, portable, and consumes no perceptible CPU or memory, making it equally suitable for office laptops, home-theater PCs, or rack-mounted render nodes. Its unobtrusive nature has already earned it recommendations on Reddit hardware forums and DisplayCAL user groups as the simplest zero-config insurance against burn-in. Marko19907’s software is available for free on get.nero.com; the site supplies the latest build through the trusted Windows Package Manager (winget) source, enabling single-command deployment and effortless batch installation alongside other open-source utilities.

OLEDShift

A small system tray utility that moves around the windows on the screen to prevent burn-in

Details