The Terminal I Wished Existed, So I Built It
The Terminal App I Wished Existed, So I Built It I've spent the better part of a decade living inside terminals. SSH sessions into production boxes at 2am. Tailing logs across a dozen services. Bou...

Source: DEV Community
The Terminal App I Wished Existed, So I Built It I've spent the better part of a decade living inside terminals. SSH sessions into production boxes at 2am. Tailing logs across a dozen services. Bouncing between databases trying to figure out why something that worked yesterday doesn't work today. Terminals are where I live. And almost all of them feel a little buggy. iTerm2 is the exception, but it's Mac-only. On Windows, every terminal I've tried has weird copy/paste quirks or downright bizarre usability issues that make you wonder if anyone on the team actually uses it daily. The Problem Nobody Talks About Here's the thing about terminal apps in 2026: they all make you choose. You want AI? Cool, sign into Warp with your email and let them phone home with telemetry. You want something that works properly on Windows? Good luck — most terminal developers treat Windows like an afterthought, if they think about it at all. You want database connections built in? That's a separate app. SSH