Computing hardware has invaded every aspect of our lives under the pretext of making things easier or saving humans time spent doing repetitive chores. Everything from smart home hardware to containerized home labs could be classified as similar a**ists in that they reduce performative duties for us. We spend hundreds of dollars on the hardware that runs them, even if the software is FOSS. However, there’s one important Windows automation tool sitting quietly in the System32 folder that’s summarily ignored.