This episode of Tech Tales Found explores the fascinating origin story of Packer, a powerful open-source tool that transformed cloud computing. Developed by Mitchell Hashimoto, co-founder of HashiCorp, Packer was born from a deep-seated aversion to repetitive tasks and a teenage fascination with video game cheating. As a young programmer, Mitchell created and sold automated cheats for online games, laying the groundwork for his future passion in automation. His journey led him to co-found HashiCorp with Armon Dadgar, where they began building tools that would redefine how companies manage infrastructure. Packer emerged as a solution to one of the most frustrating problems in IT: inconsistency across server setups. By allowing developers to define machine images using a single source configuration, Packer enabled the creation of identical, reliable environments across multiple platforms like AWS, Azure, and Google Cloud. This 'Infrastructure as Code' approach ushered in the era of immutable infrastructure, reducing errors, improving security, and dramatically speeding up deployment times. The impact of Packer is vast, silently supporting countless online services used daily—from streaming platforms to banking apps—ensuring seamless performance and scalability. Beyond its technical benefits, Packer also fostered a strong global community, drawing over 500 contributors by 2017. While HashiCorp has faced debates around licensing and commercialization, Packer remains a shining example of open-source innovation. Today, it continues to evolve, empowering DevOps teams worldwide and shaping the future of cloud infrastructure. Mitchell’s departure from HashiCorp in 2023 marked the end of an era, but his legacy lives on through Packer and the broader HashiCorp ecosystem, proving that some of the most impactful technologies begin not in corporate labs, but with curiosity, creativity, and a desire to never do boring work twice.