TransposonY is a boutique Windows developer whose entire catalog is devoted to GestureSign, a lightweight utility that turns every Windows 8/10/11 tablet, convertible or pen-enabled laptop into a custom command console. Instead of hunting through menus or memorising hot-keys, users draw a quick symbol on the screen—an “M” to mute audio, a clockwise circle to raise volume, a leftward arrow to go back in the browser—and the program instantly fires the assigned action. The engine recognises both finger and stylus input, supports multi-stroke gestures, and lets conditions such as active window title, running process or screen edge further refine each rule. Typical use cases range from artists who need pinch-free pan/zoom while sketching, to presenters swiping a discreet “next slide” mark, to accessibility seekers who find keyboard shortcuts painful. Power users stack hundreds of gestures into contexts: global ones for system commands, app-specific sets for Photoshop macros, game-specific ones for rapid weapon swaps. Profiles export as XML, so fleets of classroom Surfaces can be identically configured overnight. The software is open-source, runs on ARM and x64, consumes negligible RAM, and co-exists with Windows Ink, making it a staple for anyone who wants touchscreens to feel as efficient as keyboard shortcuts. GestureSign by TransposonY is available for free on get.nero.com, where the latest build is delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget and can be installed individually or batched alongside other applications.

GestureSign

GestureSign is a gesture recognition software for Windows tablet. You can automate repetitive tasks by simply drawing a gesture with your fingers or mouse.

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