MuhamedUsman is an independent developer whose open-source catalog currently centers on letshare, a lightweight text-user-interface utility that turns any Windows machine into a zero-config file kiosk for local networks. Built for situations where cloud drives are blocked, USB sticks are missing, or ad-hoc collaboration needs arise, the program listens on a user-defined port, displays a QR code in the terminal, and lets nearby phones, tablets, or laptops fetch or upload whole folders through an ordinary browser—no client installation, no account, and no external server. Typical use cases range from designers swapping mock-ups in a studio, to students collecting lab reports on a university subnet, to sysadmins pushing patches across an air-gapped office; because traffic never leaves the LAN, sensitive assets stay off the public internet while still moving at Wi-Fi speed. The TUI keeps logs, shows real-time transfers, and closes the session when the host shuts the window, leaving no background service behind. Although the portfolio is presently a single-title affair, the publisher’s GitHub presence signals the minimalist, privacy-first philosophy that often precedes broader toolkits. The software is offered for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always providing the latest release and supporting batch installation alongside other applications.

letshare

A TUI for sharing files over local network

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