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AutoTitle is a lightweight Windows utility developed by mydehq that streamlines the repetitive task of renaming television and podcast episode files. Designed for collectors, archivists, and anyone who routinely downloads season-based media, the program parses existing file names, compares them against user-supplied or online episode lists, and rewrites each file with a consistent, searchable pattern such as “Show Name – S01E05 – Episode Title.ext.” Beyond simple text substitution, AutoTitle 1.2.1 can insert leading zeros, strip unwanted tags, detect double episodes, and even fetch official titles from public databases when an Internet connection is present. The three released versions—1.0.0, 1.1.4, and the current 1.2.1—show a progression from basic batch renaming to an integrated workflow that now supports regular-expression filters, drag-and-drop folders, and a rollback queue for undoing accidental changes. Typical use cases include preparing a Plex or Kodi library, synchronizing scene-release names with private tracker conventions, or merely replacing cryptic download hashes with human-readable labels. Because the application operates locally, no media files are uploaded, preserving privacy while processing hundreds of episodes in seconds. The interface remains minimal: users load a directory, choose or create a naming template, preview the output, and commit the changes in one click. Logs are exported as CSV for later auditing, and command-line switches allow the engine to be scripted inside larger automated pipelines. AutoTitle belongs to the File Management category of Windows software and requires no additional runtime libraries beyond the standard .NET 4.7.2 framework already present on current systems. The software 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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