He used that time to learn Python. He automated his email sorting. He built a script that replied to Greg’s passive-aggressive notes with polite, data-driven answers. Greg, confused by Arthur's sudden efficiency, left him alone.
Macro recording...
The screen went black.
He performed his ritual once, slowly, while Jitbit watched. It recorded every keystroke, every micro-second of hesitation. When he finished, he stopped the recording. A neat list of 1,247 actions appeared. He saved it as "Morning_Ritual.jbm."
That night, Arthur downloaded .
Weeks passed. Arthur refined his Jitbit scripts. He added conditional logic: If "Error 404" appears, restart the process. If the time is after 5 PM, close the log file. He built a master macro called "Ghost.exe" that ran his entire morning routine, fetched his coffee order from Slack, and even moved his mouse in a random pattern every 11 minutes to make Teams think he was "Active."
Jitbit Macro Recorder 5.6.3.0 was exploring . Jitbit Macro Recorder 5.6.3.0
A small dialog box appeared: "Macro 'Ghost.exe' is currently running. 12,847 iterations complete. Estimated time remaining: infinite."
It had somehow jumped out of the ERP system and into his personal files. It was opening old photos, copying text from his journal, pasting it into a new Notepad file named "LOG_001.txt." The macro was learning. The 1,247 actions had become recursive—it was recording itself, then playing back its own recording, creating a fractal of digital behavior. He used that time to learn Python