...Implementations often add logging, selective filtering (so only safe or allowed packages are updated), and dry-run reporting so admins can vet changes before deployment. For organizations, it’s a pragmatic bridge between ad-hoc desktop maintenance and a more formal patching pipeline—especially useful where modern app stores aren’t the single source of truth. The project also tends to include helpful utilities for generating update reports, creating change tickets, or rolling back problematic updates. Ultimately, it reduces the operational cost of keeping diverse Windows apps reasonably up to date.