Zhorn Software is a small, UK-based independent publisher that has quietly served Windows power-users since the early 2000s with lightweight, single-purpose utilities designed to stay out of the way yet always be there when needed. The catalogue is deliberately compact: Stickies replaces the clutter of physical paper notes with infinitely customizable digital Post-its that can be pinned to the desktop, attached to specific applications, or set to appear on a schedule across a LAN; Caffeine, even smaller, simulates a key-press every 59 seconds to keep screens, VPNs, or lengthy tasks alive without touching system power settings. Both tools are portable, run happily from a USB stick, consume negligible RAM, and talk to each other through a simple TCP API—making them favourites among technicians who script corporate rollouts, gamers who hate intrusive overlays, and office workers who want reminders that survive reboots. The common thread is restraint: no splash screens, no adware, no background services, just the feature requested and nothing more. Zhorn’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are sourced from trusted Windows package managers such as winget, always deliver the latest upstream build, and can be installed individually or in a single batch command.