CuteXterm
mycroft-core
CuteXterm | mycroft-core | |
---|---|---|
13 | 212 | |
58 | 6,461 | |
- | 0.3% | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
about 3 years ago | 15 days ago | |
C | Python | |
- | Apache License 2.0 |
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CuteXterm
- Improving XTerm experience?
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Tabby is an infinitely customizable cross-platform terminal app
> Yeah... xterm with a few tweaks (and some pruning) would still be best for me.
Check https://github.com/csdvrx/CuteXterm for my bag of tricks :)
xterm offers the best emulation, period. The developer is reactive and maintain high quality standards. The only real issues for me are the lack of configurable shortcuts, and ligatures. wezterm is a good option if you need these, and don't depend on xterm perfect emulation.
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Forking Chrome to Render in a Terminal
> Most emulate an xterm, which didn't have support for graphics
Start your xterm with the right flags and it will.
If you want a premade configuration, see https://github.com/csdvrx/CuteXterm
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Thinkpad X1 Fold review from an old thinkpad user
See my rant on https://github.com/csdvrx/cuteXterm
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I Finally Found a Solid Debian Tablet: The Surface Go 2
> Surely you need AHK because Windows is less configurable
No, because it lets me do remap like having Caps be both Control and Esc - and I do the same with Enter being both Control when used with another key, and Enter alone. My Alt keys are Alt keys when used with another key, or Home/End when used alone.
> How are you using terminals in Windows? Like you want to SSH from a fresh install, what do I do?
Install openssh from the windows settings (check https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-server/administrati...)
I'd recommend the latest Windows terminal from the Microsoft store, or mintty from msys2, but that's just for comfort :)
> I find Linux superior here, but interested to learn why you're the opposite; maybe I'm doing it wrong
I like sixels, so I prefer mintty, but even without sixels, I find the Windows experience better: I want cute fonts with ligatures in my terminal. I want proper support of bold, underline, italic. I want multiple tabs. I want to map key actions to everything - like, I want my terminal to change its color profile and font with just 1 key.
That's very hard on Linux. That's easy on Windows.
https://github.com/csdvrx/cuteXterm#why-did-you-make-cutexte...
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what windows features that have no equivalent in linux?
If I was feeling playful, I'd point you to https://github.com/csdvrx/cuteXterm and grab some popcorn while you turn red and pretend it doesn't matter and we could have a fun debate.
- CuteXterm- Sensible defaults for xterm in the 21st century
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Show HN: Sixel-tmux displays graphics even if your terminal has no Sixel support
Apologies for misgendering you. My opinion that you come off like a windows fangirl was mostly due to the other rant you linked in the sixel-tmux rant: https://github.com/csdvrx/cutexterm#wait-i-thought-people-sa...
Here you mention some other things unrelated to terminals, and I was mostly addressing those. It seems to me you want a specific type of experience on Linux, but you can't get that, so therefore dismiss the merits of Linux. I think a lot of your impressions on Linux come from using an X11 based setup instead of Wayland. Completely different beasts, and I think a lot of your grievances would be solved by the latter.
For me, I cannot go back to Windows, ethical reasons aside: Sway on Wayland is perfect for me, and it's what I want out of my computing experience.
I actually agree with a lot that is written in those rants, particularly the VTE and gnome terminal situation. It's just your comments on windows vs linux came across as very personal imo, so I suppose I have retorted here with also a somewhat personal rant.
Also, I don't think either platform has many good terminal choices. Besides mintty, I don't think there are that many good (platform exclusive) terminal emulators on Windows. And on Linux, Foot is one of the few that meets my criteria, including top tier Sixel support (though Wezterm meets my criteria too if it wasn't so slow, hopefully it gets faster). But, for example, I could never really like mintty if I was forced to use Windows, because it lacks features I want.
What I'm trying to say: different needs, different use cases, different tastes. Sorry that my original rant came off so negatively to you and that I wasn't able to convey this point I was trying to make.
- CuteXterm: a full configuration to have a tabbed Xterm with proper sixel support
mycroft-core
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Rabbit R1, Designed by Teenage Engineering
It's indeed suspicious. You're sending your voice samples, your various services accounts, your location and more private data to some proprietary black box in some public cloud. Sorry, but this is a privacy nightmare. It should be open source and self-hosted like Mycroft (https://mycroft.ai) or Leon (https://getleon.ai) to be trustworthy.
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Finally! Kernel 6.6.6 has been released
Shouldn't this be Mycroft on this sub?
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Mycroft
I was expecting this to be about Mycroft the AI assistant ( https://mycroft.ai/ ).
- Ask HN: Is there any open source/open hardware Echo Dot alike?
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Coral TPU Dev Board for speech-to-text and nvidia agx as host running LLaMA??
But I would recommend writing some proper glue logic in Python and use the socket function for communication. But if you really want to get rid of Alexa, it's probably worth it to set up mycroft.ai or another open source assistant.
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Matter hasn't revolutionized the smart home yet, but AI may be about to change that - the TechRadar article claims most people don't have smart homes, just connected homes.
https://mycroft.ai/ is a sophisticated open source replacement for Siri/Alexa … you can buy their premade hardware version for $399
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Local AI -- A semi-reliable copy of human knowledge that can live in a box in your kitchen
To add home automation, consider something like Mycroft (https://mycroft.ai/)
- Using LLaMA as a "real personal assistant"?
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Show HN: Willow – Open-Source Privacy-Focused Voice Assistant Hardware
This project reminds me of MyCroft https://github.com/MycroftAI/mycroft-core.
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Is Voice AI safe?
Tldr either way it depends, but if it's free, your data is prob the real product. If you don't want to get data mined, check out https://mycroft.ai
What are some alternatives?
sixvid - Simple script for animated GIF viewing using sixels
rhasspy - Offline private voice assistant for many human languages
xserver-SIXEL - A X server implementation for SIXEL-featured terminals, based on @pelya's Xsdl kdrive server(https://github.com/pelya/xserver-xsdl)
Leon - 🧠 Leon is your open-source personal assistant.
notcurses - blingful character graphics/TUI library. definitely not curses.
kalliope - Kalliope is a framework that will help you to create your own personal assistant.
linux-surface - Linux Kernel for Surface Devices
jasper-client - Client code for Jasper voice computing platform
matplotlib-sixel - A sixel graphics backend for matplotlib
jarvis - Jarvis is a simple IA for home automation with (multi-languages) voice commands written in Python.
mosh-windows-wrappers - Windows native port of Mobile Shell (mosh).
J.A.R.V.I.S-project - A decent attempt to recreate J.A.R.V.I.S. from MCU's Iron Man, complete with machine learning (specifically, intent classification) [Moved to: https://github.com/Joe-Lyu/J.A.R.V.I.S-project]