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PyAutoActions 1.4.4, published by 7gxycn08 and now in its fifth public iteration, is a lightweight Windows utility built to remove the friction from high-dynamic-range display management. Instead of manually toggling the operating-system HDR flag before and after every gaming or content-creation session, the program watches named processes and flips the switch automatically whenever a monitored executable starts or stops. The core use case is seamless HDR for full-screen games that behave differently when Windows HDR is enabled, but the same rule engine can be applied to HDR-capable video players, photo editors, or any application whose output benefits from the extended color and luminance range. Because the tool runs as an unobtrusive background service, users can compile a simple list of .exe names, set optional delays to avoid flicker, and let the software enforce the desired state without further intervention. Settings are stored in a portable JSON file, so the configuration can be carried across PCs or backed up without registry edits. The entire package is written in Python and packaged as a signed Windows executable, ensuring compatibility from Windows 10 1903 onward and requiring no administrative rights after the first HDR-enable test. Gamers who previously kept HDR permanently on—and tolerated washed-out desktops—can now enjoy accurate SDR browsing and true HDR gaming in the same session, while creative professionals can assign separate color profiles to HDR and SDR workflows without touching a hotkey. PyAutoActions is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always serving the latest version and supporting batch installation alongside other applications.
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