Federico Terzi is an independent developer best known for Espanso, an open-source, privacy-centric text-expansion utility that runs identically on Windows, macOS, and Linux. Built in Rust, the tool listens quietly in the background and instantly replaces short keywords or abbreviations with longer phrases, code snippets, signatures, emoji, or even dynamic content such as the current date, clipboard values, or script outputs. Typical use cases range from customer-support teams inserting canned replies and developers injecting boilerplate code to academics typing repetitive citations and writers auto-completing long technical terms. Because all expansion rules are stored locally in plain-text configuration files, Espanso appeals to privacy-minded professionals who prefer to keep sensitive templates off cloud servers. The program supports shell, script, and form-based expansions, regex triggers, application-specific contexts, and a package manager that lets users share community-maintained word lists for programming languages, medical terminology, and foreign-language snippets. Lightweight and keyboard-driven, it integrates smoothly with IDEs, e-mail clients, chat apps, and web browsers without requiring intrusive permissions. Espanso is available for free on get.nero.com, where the latest build is delivered through a trusted Windows package source such as winget, and multiple applications can be installed in one batch operation.

Espanso

A Privacy-first, Cross-platform Text Expander

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