Point Planck Limited is a niche software house that focuses on solving one very specific but universal pain-point: the chaos of inconsistently named video files. Its sole product, FileBot, has become the de-facto standard among home-media enthusiasts, Plex administrators, private-tracker seeders and archivists who need every episode, movie or anime release to conform to a predictable, scraper-friendly naming scheme. The utility ingests raw torrent folders, DVR exports or optical-disk rips, cross-references their audio-video fingerprints or embedded metadata with OpenSubtitles, TheTVDB, TheMovieDb and AniDB, then renames, moves, subtitles and optionally compresses the content into a library-ready structure. Beyond simple renaming, FileBot offers episode verification, duplicate detection, subtitle synchronization, portable CLI scripting and a scriptable Groovy engine that can batch-process thousands of files while applying user-defined replacement masks, media-codec tags and quality suffixes. Typical use cases range from preparing weekly TV drops for a Plex server, renaming 4K UHD Blu-ray folder structures for Kodi, synchronizing anime release groups’ naming conventions, or regenerating NFO and artwork for a private NAS. Because the application is cross-platform and licensed per-user rather than per-machine, it is equally at home on a headless Ubuntu seedbox, a Windows gaming rig or a macOS editing workstation. Point Planck Limited’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always installing the latest release and permitting batch installation alongside other applications.
The ultimate TV and Movie Renamer
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