Rishi Yaduwanshi is an independent developer whose open-source utilities focus on streamlining everyday coding workflows; the single title presently offered, Boiler, acts as a lightweight but extensible snippet manager that lets programmers collect, tag, and instantly inject reusable functions, templates, and entire technology stacks either from a local vault or from synchronized Git-based remotes. Typical usage spans bootstrapping micro-services with pre-validated Dockerfiles, sharing React component boilerplates across team laptops, and maintaining versioned Terraform modules that can be dropped into new projects without manual copy-paste drift. By keeping a CLI-first interface and storing everything in plain JSON, the tool integrates naturally into CI pipelines, IDE shortcuts, or shell aliases, so developers can scaffold folders, populate read-me files, and wire dependencies in seconds rather than minutes. Although the catalogue is small, the project’s public roadmap shows planned plug-ins for major editors and cloud drives, indicating an ambition to grow into a broader productivity suite aimed at DevOps, front-end, and automation specialists who value speed, transparency, and Git-centric collaboration. The publisher’s software can be downloaded free of charge from get.nero.com, where packages are delivered through trusted Windows sources such as winget, always resolving to the newest upstream release and supporting unattended batch installation of multiple applications.
Store reusable code snippets and stacks locally and in remote repositories.
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