Mylloon is an emerging French publisher that concentrates on lightweight, single-purpose utilities rather than sprawling suites, and its debut title “dsr” exemplifies that philosophy: a minimalist tray application that intercepts any local video feed—gameplay clip, webcam recording, or screen capture—and instantly mirrors it to a Discord voice channel without forcing the user to leave the keyboard. The tool is aimed at streamers who want to preview highlight reels for friends, developers who need to show a bug in real time, or online tutors who must broadcast a short tutorial without setting up a full OBS scene. Written in portable C#, dsr hooks into Discord’s Rich Presence and Go Live APIs, negotiates the optimal bitrate, and exposes only three toggles—monitor selection, resolution ceiling, and push-to-talk overlay—so even first-time users can go from launch to sharing in under ten seconds. Because the executable is self-contained and consumes less than 60 MB of RAM, it is frequently carried on tournament USB sticks or cloud-synced folders for plug-and-play deployment on any Windows 10/11 box. Mylloon’s public Git repository tracks nightly builds, accepts merge requests for new codec packs, and publishes cryptographic signatures that corporate admins can whitelist, underscoring a commitment to transparency that is rare for niche multimedia helpers. The publisher’s software is offered free of charge on get.nero.com, where downloads are funneled through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always pull the freshest release, and can be queued alongside other titles for unattended batch installation.

dsr

Tool for sharing video to Discord

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