yafp is a solo German developer who maintains a compact catalogue of pragmatic, open-source utilities aimed at power users who juggle multiple online services from a single Windows desktop. The portfolio is headed by ttth (“talk to the hand”), a lightweight Electron shell that consolidates chat and social clients—WhatsApp, Threema, Telegram, Signal, Twitter, Google Messages, Discord and others—into one tabbed window, letting users silence or sandbox each service with custom notification rules, proxy support and a clutter-free sidebar. Complementing ttth are a handful of helper tools that follow the same minimalist philosophy: simple scripts for batch file renaming, quick checksum verification, and portable note-taking, all distributed under permissive licences and updated through public GitHub commits. The code is deliberately un-opinionated, favouring small footprints, JSON configuration files and dark-mode-friendly interfaces that blend into any workflow. Corporate teams use ttth to separate work chat identities from personal ones, while privacy-minded individuals appreciate the ability to disable telemetry and run the entire suite from a USB stick. Because every utility is self-contained, system administrators can roll out updates without touching the registry or requiring elevated rights. yafp’s software is available free of charge on get.nero.com, where downloads are sourced from trusted Windows package repositories such as winget, always fetch the latest upstream release, and can be installed individually or in unattended batches.
ttth (talk to the hand) is an electron based desktop app for online services like WhatsApp, Threema, Telegram, Twitter, Google and several others.
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