Render anything inline. Save sessions and history. Powered by open web standards.

I’m trying it, and it does looks nice.

  • surfrock66
    link
    English
    41 year ago

    I’ve been looking for a terminal with better bookmark support; I use mRemoteNG on windows for my RDP/SSH work, and I haven’t been happy with any alternative on Linux that handles session bookmarks like that. I’m curious to try this.

    • Eager Eagle
      link
      English
      71 year ago

      the hell are terminal bookmarks?

      • surfrock66
        link
        English
        31 year ago

        I manage a lot of systems, so just click to open a ssh session in a new tab. I usually have shell aliases, but a bookmark that could set the title of the tab to the hostname and account for easier nav would be my goal. Being able to dynamically open tab groups too would be good, like if I have a dev/prod/SQL server for an app I could 1-click to open a group of 3 tabs

        • @node815
          link
          English
          31 year ago

          Well, there’s this if you want to use it in Linux, I’ve used it before, liked it well enough, but not paying for it so I removed it (It’s sort of crippled if run free). I personally use Konsole on KDE which works quite well. I’ve read and think that Konsole also allows multiple bookmarked connections. I haven’t really tested it myself, I have roughly 10 machines I log into daily so I may try that further.

          https://termius.com/

          Before I made the leap to Linux years ago, I loved using MRemoteNG. Simply hands down the best. IMHO

          I tesed the client posted here by the OP. While it looks pretty nice, it suffers the same thing as others I’ve tried. Nothing beats the simplicity of the plain 'ol shell in Linux or in OSX. :)

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      41 year ago

      Windows Terminal has profiles that you can configure a lot so you can have SSH profiles too, don’t know if that fits your use case exactly though