Packaging for three operating systems and keeping a sense of humor
Windows wants an installer, macOS wants a DMG, Linux wants options. We wanted every download to open.
Read the story →DEVELOPMENT LOG
Ten stories about how OpenMultiTerm went from organizing windows to preserving sessions, launching agents, and dressing for an orbital city.
Windows wants an installer, macOS wants a DMG, Linux wants options. We wanted every download to open.
Read the story →The terminal looked into the future, found an orbital city, and decided it was a perfectly reasonable place to run tests.
Read the story →Because “Terminal 3” is not very helpful when one pane points to production and another to a folder you swore you deleted.
Read the story →A powerful tool can feel special without requiring a cockpit manual before you open bash.
Read the story →The window can leave. Your processes do not need to join it in a dramatic group exit.
Read the story →Saving a grid is useful. Saving its working directories is the difference between restoring a view and restoring the work.
Read the story →Detect CLIs, launch them inside a stable shell, and stop memorizing install commands at unreasonable hours.
Read the story →Publishing a beta means the software can leave home, even if it still texts to ask where the keys are.
Read the story →Renaming a project sounds easy until you discover that its name lives in 47 places and one of them is staring directly at you.
Read the story →The first version started with a simple question: why are we still arranging eight windows like a high-stakes game of Tetris?
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