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Input Leap 3.0.2-release is an open-source KVM (keyboard, video, mouse) utility that lets one set of peripherals control several Windows, macOS, or Linux computers over a local network, eliminating the need for extra hardware switches. Designed for developers, designers, and office workstations that run multiple physical machines side-by-side, the application streams mouse movement and keystrokes from the host desktop to adjacent systems the moment the cursor crosses a screen boundary configured in its drag-and-drop grid. Clipboard text and basic drag-and-drop files can also travel with the pointer, so copying a code snippet from a Linux terminal and pasting it into a Windows IDE becomes seamless. Because the program operates at the driver level, latency stays low enough for real-time tasks such as multi-platform testing or controlling a render node while keeping the main workstation free. The 3.0.2-release build introduces TLS encryption for network traffic, Wayland support on Linux, and a rewritten macOS backend that no longer requires accessibility workarounds, while still supporting the older 2.x branch for legacy systems. Both versions are maintained under the GPLv2 license, allowing enterprises to audit and modify the codebase for compliance or custom branding. Typical deployments pair a high-powered desktop with a laptop or secondary tower, but multi-seat labs have scaled the same daemon to more than a dozen clients without additional licensing cost. Input Leap is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always delivering the latest version and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.
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