Is there a web based terminal/ssh client?












30















I'm at a library, and all of the computers are Windows based. I'm sshing into my Ubuntu box somewhere else. The terms of service says "You may not make any changes to system files." However, when I ssh into my Ubuntu box, it might "look" like I'm hacking, since I've had a few people (including I presume the library supervisor) look at my computer funny when I opened a website where the text was a monospaced font and the website background was black. Running Command Prompt will certainly be considered to be hacking if looking at a website was.



If I'm sshing into my box it appears as though I'm "hacking" into the computer. I'd like to somehow do it in a web browser with nice happy looking text, so that it actually represents what I'm doing; I'm not going to hack into the computer, I'm only using a computer somewhere else.










share|improve this question

























  • firefox or internet explorer? Are they locked-down to prevent you installing add-ons/active-x controls?

    – fossfreedom
    Aug 18 '11 at 21:31






  • 1





    Wikipedia: Web Based SSH

    – frabjous
    Aug 18 '11 at 21:56











  • Firefox, Internet explored if I haveee to

    – alexy13
    Aug 19 '11 at 0:03











  • If you can run files, you can use a portable version of PuTTY.

    – UniversallyUniqueID
    Apr 3 '16 at 11:11
















30















I'm at a library, and all of the computers are Windows based. I'm sshing into my Ubuntu box somewhere else. The terms of service says "You may not make any changes to system files." However, when I ssh into my Ubuntu box, it might "look" like I'm hacking, since I've had a few people (including I presume the library supervisor) look at my computer funny when I opened a website where the text was a monospaced font and the website background was black. Running Command Prompt will certainly be considered to be hacking if looking at a website was.



If I'm sshing into my box it appears as though I'm "hacking" into the computer. I'd like to somehow do it in a web browser with nice happy looking text, so that it actually represents what I'm doing; I'm not going to hack into the computer, I'm only using a computer somewhere else.










share|improve this question

























  • firefox or internet explorer? Are they locked-down to prevent you installing add-ons/active-x controls?

    – fossfreedom
    Aug 18 '11 at 21:31






  • 1





    Wikipedia: Web Based SSH

    – frabjous
    Aug 18 '11 at 21:56











  • Firefox, Internet explored if I haveee to

    – alexy13
    Aug 19 '11 at 0:03











  • If you can run files, you can use a portable version of PuTTY.

    – UniversallyUniqueID
    Apr 3 '16 at 11:11














30












30








30


7






I'm at a library, and all of the computers are Windows based. I'm sshing into my Ubuntu box somewhere else. The terms of service says "You may not make any changes to system files." However, when I ssh into my Ubuntu box, it might "look" like I'm hacking, since I've had a few people (including I presume the library supervisor) look at my computer funny when I opened a website where the text was a monospaced font and the website background was black. Running Command Prompt will certainly be considered to be hacking if looking at a website was.



If I'm sshing into my box it appears as though I'm "hacking" into the computer. I'd like to somehow do it in a web browser with nice happy looking text, so that it actually represents what I'm doing; I'm not going to hack into the computer, I'm only using a computer somewhere else.










share|improve this question
















I'm at a library, and all of the computers are Windows based. I'm sshing into my Ubuntu box somewhere else. The terms of service says "You may not make any changes to system files." However, when I ssh into my Ubuntu box, it might "look" like I'm hacking, since I've had a few people (including I presume the library supervisor) look at my computer funny when I opened a website where the text was a monospaced font and the website background was black. Running Command Prompt will certainly be considered to be hacking if looking at a website was.



If I'm sshing into my box it appears as though I'm "hacking" into the computer. I'd like to somehow do it in a web browser with nice happy looking text, so that it actually represents what I'm doing; I'm not going to hack into the computer, I'm only using a computer somewhere else.







software-recommendation command-line






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Sep 2 '16 at 18:40







alexy13

















asked Aug 18 '11 at 21:20









alexy13alexy13

1,38771832




1,38771832













  • firefox or internet explorer? Are they locked-down to prevent you installing add-ons/active-x controls?

    – fossfreedom
    Aug 18 '11 at 21:31






  • 1





    Wikipedia: Web Based SSH

    – frabjous
    Aug 18 '11 at 21:56











  • Firefox, Internet explored if I haveee to

    – alexy13
    Aug 19 '11 at 0:03











  • If you can run files, you can use a portable version of PuTTY.

    – UniversallyUniqueID
    Apr 3 '16 at 11:11



















  • firefox or internet explorer? Are they locked-down to prevent you installing add-ons/active-x controls?

    – fossfreedom
    Aug 18 '11 at 21:31






  • 1





    Wikipedia: Web Based SSH

    – frabjous
    Aug 18 '11 at 21:56











  • Firefox, Internet explored if I haveee to

    – alexy13
    Aug 19 '11 at 0:03











  • If you can run files, you can use a portable version of PuTTY.

    – UniversallyUniqueID
    Apr 3 '16 at 11:11

















firefox or internet explorer? Are they locked-down to prevent you installing add-ons/active-x controls?

– fossfreedom
Aug 18 '11 at 21:31





firefox or internet explorer? Are they locked-down to prevent you installing add-ons/active-x controls?

– fossfreedom
Aug 18 '11 at 21:31




1




1





Wikipedia: Web Based SSH

– frabjous
Aug 18 '11 at 21:56





Wikipedia: Web Based SSH

– frabjous
Aug 18 '11 at 21:56













Firefox, Internet explored if I haveee to

– alexy13
Aug 19 '11 at 0:03





Firefox, Internet explored if I haveee to

– alexy13
Aug 19 '11 at 0:03













If you can run files, you can use a portable version of PuTTY.

– UniversallyUniqueID
Apr 3 '16 at 11:11





If you can run files, you can use a portable version of PuTTY.

– UniversallyUniqueID
Apr 3 '16 at 11:11










8 Answers
8






active

oldest

votes


















13














If the Library is using Firefox and has the ability to install add-ons, try FireSSH - its a javascript based SSH client.



enter image description here






share|improve this answer
























  • Also see: askubuntu.com/q/48515/17789

    – con-f-use
    Aug 19 '11 at 12:04











  • also available for Chrome

    – ccpizza
    Jan 19 '17 at 16:19



















8














If you're on Google Chrome/Chromium, you could give Secure Shell a shot. It is a complete terminal emulator and a SSH client.

It and is developed by Google, and runs offline :)




Secure Shell is an xterm-compatible terminal emulator and stand-alone
ssh client for Chrome. It uses Native-Client to connect directly to
ssh servers without the need for external proxies.




enter image description here



You could also go with another extension, Devtools Terminal, which is a terminal emulator.



Note : This one requires a npm-install though. Details



enter image description here



Happy SSHing :)






share|improve this answer
























  • This answer doesn't address the issues mentioned in the question, however +1 because it absolutely answers the question title.

    – Steve Buzonas
    Feb 25 '14 at 16:58



















6














What you'll probably want to do, is to install a HTML-based terminal emulator. There are several (many) to choose from. That will give you a text field in a webpage (such as the one I'm currently typing into) and that will run on your system.



This is a list of such applications, in no particular order. I have little or no experience with these:




  • http://anyterm.org/

  • http://scott.yang.id.au/2006/04/ajaxterm-terminal-emulation/

  • http://code.google.com/p/shellinabox/


You can see live demos of the three at the bottom of this page: http://anyterm.org/demos.html



All of these will work in any browser. Probably even IE4 :)






share|improve this answer































    5














    Try this: tty.js --- A terminal for your browser, using node/express/socket.io



    Features:




    • Tabs, Stacking Windows, Maximizable Terminals

    • Screen/Tmux-like keys (optional)

    • Ability to efficiently render programs: vim, mc, irssi, vifm, etc.

    • Support for xterm mouse events

    • 256 color support

    • Persistent sessions






    share|improve this answer
























    • how to install it ? is it in-built or have to install ?

      – rɑːdʒɑ
      May 27 '13 at 5:41






    • 1





      @Jai The above link has all the information you need. Just npm install tty.js to install and tty.js to start serving.

      – Bohr
      May 29 '13 at 9:53



















    2














    I would like to recommend GateOne, powerful and snappy. Author has Docker image as well for easy setup.






    share|improve this answer































      2














      Disclaimer: I'm the primary developer for Shellvault.



      Another option is Shellvault, a web-based cloud SSH client that you don't have to download or set up yourself. It has terminal multiplexing, it looks nice by default, and since it's cloud-based, you can administer your servers from any computer without setting up SSH on a new machine.



      Shellvault.io terminal interface



      Shellvault is a Software-as-a-Service, so it's not free, but it has free trial so you can see if you like using it. After the 7-day trial, a subscription costs $5/month.






      share|improve this answer































        1














        I use ShellInAbox to access my pc from behind very restrictive firewall using just my browser. I also configure it to go over https like I've wrote here:



        ShellInAbox with https using your browser



        Also you needed to use dynamic dns service provider like dyndns to be able to pinpoint your PC.






        share|improve this answer

































          0














          You should try Bastillion - https://www.bastillion.io You can use multiple terminals simultaneously (like tmux).






          share|improve this answer

























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            8 Answers
            8






            active

            oldest

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            8 Answers
            8






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            13














            If the Library is using Firefox and has the ability to install add-ons, try FireSSH - its a javascript based SSH client.



            enter image description here






            share|improve this answer
























            • Also see: askubuntu.com/q/48515/17789

              – con-f-use
              Aug 19 '11 at 12:04











            • also available for Chrome

              – ccpizza
              Jan 19 '17 at 16:19
















            13














            If the Library is using Firefox and has the ability to install add-ons, try FireSSH - its a javascript based SSH client.



            enter image description here






            share|improve this answer
























            • Also see: askubuntu.com/q/48515/17789

              – con-f-use
              Aug 19 '11 at 12:04











            • also available for Chrome

              – ccpizza
              Jan 19 '17 at 16:19














            13












            13








            13







            If the Library is using Firefox and has the ability to install add-ons, try FireSSH - its a javascript based SSH client.



            enter image description here






            share|improve this answer













            If the Library is using Firefox and has the ability to install add-ons, try FireSSH - its a javascript based SSH client.



            enter image description here







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Aug 18 '11 at 21:57









            fossfreedomfossfreedom

            149k37328372




            149k37328372













            • Also see: askubuntu.com/q/48515/17789

              – con-f-use
              Aug 19 '11 at 12:04











            • also available for Chrome

              – ccpizza
              Jan 19 '17 at 16:19



















            • Also see: askubuntu.com/q/48515/17789

              – con-f-use
              Aug 19 '11 at 12:04











            • also available for Chrome

              – ccpizza
              Jan 19 '17 at 16:19

















            Also see: askubuntu.com/q/48515/17789

            – con-f-use
            Aug 19 '11 at 12:04





            Also see: askubuntu.com/q/48515/17789

            – con-f-use
            Aug 19 '11 at 12:04













            also available for Chrome

            – ccpizza
            Jan 19 '17 at 16:19





            also available for Chrome

            – ccpizza
            Jan 19 '17 at 16:19













            8














            If you're on Google Chrome/Chromium, you could give Secure Shell a shot. It is a complete terminal emulator and a SSH client.

            It and is developed by Google, and runs offline :)




            Secure Shell is an xterm-compatible terminal emulator and stand-alone
            ssh client for Chrome. It uses Native-Client to connect directly to
            ssh servers without the need for external proxies.




            enter image description here



            You could also go with another extension, Devtools Terminal, which is a terminal emulator.



            Note : This one requires a npm-install though. Details



            enter image description here



            Happy SSHing :)






            share|improve this answer
























            • This answer doesn't address the issues mentioned in the question, however +1 because it absolutely answers the question title.

              – Steve Buzonas
              Feb 25 '14 at 16:58
















            8














            If you're on Google Chrome/Chromium, you could give Secure Shell a shot. It is a complete terminal emulator and a SSH client.

            It and is developed by Google, and runs offline :)




            Secure Shell is an xterm-compatible terminal emulator and stand-alone
            ssh client for Chrome. It uses Native-Client to connect directly to
            ssh servers without the need for external proxies.




            enter image description here



            You could also go with another extension, Devtools Terminal, which is a terminal emulator.



            Note : This one requires a npm-install though. Details



            enter image description here



            Happy SSHing :)






            share|improve this answer
























            • This answer doesn't address the issues mentioned in the question, however +1 because it absolutely answers the question title.

              – Steve Buzonas
              Feb 25 '14 at 16:58














            8












            8








            8







            If you're on Google Chrome/Chromium, you could give Secure Shell a shot. It is a complete terminal emulator and a SSH client.

            It and is developed by Google, and runs offline :)




            Secure Shell is an xterm-compatible terminal emulator and stand-alone
            ssh client for Chrome. It uses Native-Client to connect directly to
            ssh servers without the need for external proxies.




            enter image description here



            You could also go with another extension, Devtools Terminal, which is a terminal emulator.



            Note : This one requires a npm-install though. Details



            enter image description here



            Happy SSHing :)






            share|improve this answer













            If you're on Google Chrome/Chromium, you could give Secure Shell a shot. It is a complete terminal emulator and a SSH client.

            It and is developed by Google, and runs offline :)




            Secure Shell is an xterm-compatible terminal emulator and stand-alone
            ssh client for Chrome. It uses Native-Client to connect directly to
            ssh servers without the need for external proxies.




            enter image description here



            You could also go with another extension, Devtools Terminal, which is a terminal emulator.



            Note : This one requires a npm-install though. Details



            enter image description here



            Happy SSHing :)







            share|improve this answer












            share|improve this answer



            share|improve this answer










            answered Dec 11 '13 at 7:58









            Pranav 웃Pranav 웃

            38656




            38656













            • This answer doesn't address the issues mentioned in the question, however +1 because it absolutely answers the question title.

              – Steve Buzonas
              Feb 25 '14 at 16:58



















            • This answer doesn't address the issues mentioned in the question, however +1 because it absolutely answers the question title.

              – Steve Buzonas
              Feb 25 '14 at 16:58

















            This answer doesn't address the issues mentioned in the question, however +1 because it absolutely answers the question title.

            – Steve Buzonas
            Feb 25 '14 at 16:58





            This answer doesn't address the issues mentioned in the question, however +1 because it absolutely answers the question title.

            – Steve Buzonas
            Feb 25 '14 at 16:58











            6














            What you'll probably want to do, is to install a HTML-based terminal emulator. There are several (many) to choose from. That will give you a text field in a webpage (such as the one I'm currently typing into) and that will run on your system.



            This is a list of such applications, in no particular order. I have little or no experience with these:




            • http://anyterm.org/

            • http://scott.yang.id.au/2006/04/ajaxterm-terminal-emulation/

            • http://code.google.com/p/shellinabox/


            You can see live demos of the three at the bottom of this page: http://anyterm.org/demos.html



            All of these will work in any browser. Probably even IE4 :)






            share|improve this answer




























              6














              What you'll probably want to do, is to install a HTML-based terminal emulator. There are several (many) to choose from. That will give you a text field in a webpage (such as the one I'm currently typing into) and that will run on your system.



              This is a list of such applications, in no particular order. I have little or no experience with these:




              • http://anyterm.org/

              • http://scott.yang.id.au/2006/04/ajaxterm-terminal-emulation/

              • http://code.google.com/p/shellinabox/


              You can see live demos of the three at the bottom of this page: http://anyterm.org/demos.html



              All of these will work in any browser. Probably even IE4 :)






              share|improve this answer


























                6












                6








                6







                What you'll probably want to do, is to install a HTML-based terminal emulator. There are several (many) to choose from. That will give you a text field in a webpage (such as the one I'm currently typing into) and that will run on your system.



                This is a list of such applications, in no particular order. I have little or no experience with these:




                • http://anyterm.org/

                • http://scott.yang.id.au/2006/04/ajaxterm-terminal-emulation/

                • http://code.google.com/p/shellinabox/


                You can see live demos of the three at the bottom of this page: http://anyterm.org/demos.html



                All of these will work in any browser. Probably even IE4 :)






                share|improve this answer













                What you'll probably want to do, is to install a HTML-based terminal emulator. There are several (many) to choose from. That will give you a text field in a webpage (such as the one I'm currently typing into) and that will run on your system.



                This is a list of such applications, in no particular order. I have little or no experience with these:




                • http://anyterm.org/

                • http://scott.yang.id.au/2006/04/ajaxterm-terminal-emulation/

                • http://code.google.com/p/shellinabox/


                You can see live demos of the three at the bottom of this page: http://anyterm.org/demos.html



                All of these will work in any browser. Probably even IE4 :)







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Aug 19 '11 at 22:50









                Jo-Erlend SchinstadJo-Erlend Schinstad

                26.4k556108




                26.4k556108























                    5














                    Try this: tty.js --- A terminal for your browser, using node/express/socket.io



                    Features:




                    • Tabs, Stacking Windows, Maximizable Terminals

                    • Screen/Tmux-like keys (optional)

                    • Ability to efficiently render programs: vim, mc, irssi, vifm, etc.

                    • Support for xterm mouse events

                    • 256 color support

                    • Persistent sessions






                    share|improve this answer
























                    • how to install it ? is it in-built or have to install ?

                      – rɑːdʒɑ
                      May 27 '13 at 5:41






                    • 1





                      @Jai The above link has all the information you need. Just npm install tty.js to install and tty.js to start serving.

                      – Bohr
                      May 29 '13 at 9:53
















                    5














                    Try this: tty.js --- A terminal for your browser, using node/express/socket.io



                    Features:




                    • Tabs, Stacking Windows, Maximizable Terminals

                    • Screen/Tmux-like keys (optional)

                    • Ability to efficiently render programs: vim, mc, irssi, vifm, etc.

                    • Support for xterm mouse events

                    • 256 color support

                    • Persistent sessions






                    share|improve this answer
























                    • how to install it ? is it in-built or have to install ?

                      – rɑːdʒɑ
                      May 27 '13 at 5:41






                    • 1





                      @Jai The above link has all the information you need. Just npm install tty.js to install and tty.js to start serving.

                      – Bohr
                      May 29 '13 at 9:53














                    5












                    5








                    5







                    Try this: tty.js --- A terminal for your browser, using node/express/socket.io



                    Features:




                    • Tabs, Stacking Windows, Maximizable Terminals

                    • Screen/Tmux-like keys (optional)

                    • Ability to efficiently render programs: vim, mc, irssi, vifm, etc.

                    • Support for xterm mouse events

                    • 256 color support

                    • Persistent sessions






                    share|improve this answer













                    Try this: tty.js --- A terminal for your browser, using node/express/socket.io



                    Features:




                    • Tabs, Stacking Windows, Maximizable Terminals

                    • Screen/Tmux-like keys (optional)

                    • Ability to efficiently render programs: vim, mc, irssi, vifm, etc.

                    • Support for xterm mouse events

                    • 256 color support

                    • Persistent sessions







                    share|improve this answer












                    share|improve this answer



                    share|improve this answer










                    answered May 27 '13 at 4:04









                    BohrBohr

                    20124




                    20124













                    • how to install it ? is it in-built or have to install ?

                      – rɑːdʒɑ
                      May 27 '13 at 5:41






                    • 1





                      @Jai The above link has all the information you need. Just npm install tty.js to install and tty.js to start serving.

                      – Bohr
                      May 29 '13 at 9:53



















                    • how to install it ? is it in-built or have to install ?

                      – rɑːdʒɑ
                      May 27 '13 at 5:41






                    • 1





                      @Jai The above link has all the information you need. Just npm install tty.js to install and tty.js to start serving.

                      – Bohr
                      May 29 '13 at 9:53

















                    how to install it ? is it in-built or have to install ?

                    – rɑːdʒɑ
                    May 27 '13 at 5:41





                    how to install it ? is it in-built or have to install ?

                    – rɑːdʒɑ
                    May 27 '13 at 5:41




                    1




                    1





                    @Jai The above link has all the information you need. Just npm install tty.js to install and tty.js to start serving.

                    – Bohr
                    May 29 '13 at 9:53





                    @Jai The above link has all the information you need. Just npm install tty.js to install and tty.js to start serving.

                    – Bohr
                    May 29 '13 at 9:53











                    2














                    I would like to recommend GateOne, powerful and snappy. Author has Docker image as well for easy setup.






                    share|improve this answer




























                      2














                      I would like to recommend GateOne, powerful and snappy. Author has Docker image as well for easy setup.






                      share|improve this answer


























                        2












                        2








                        2







                        I would like to recommend GateOne, powerful and snappy. Author has Docker image as well for easy setup.






                        share|improve this answer













                        I would like to recommend GateOne, powerful and snappy. Author has Docker image as well for easy setup.







                        share|improve this answer












                        share|improve this answer



                        share|improve this answer










                        answered Mar 27 '16 at 2:13









                        MohnishMohnish

                        21124




                        21124























                            2














                            Disclaimer: I'm the primary developer for Shellvault.



                            Another option is Shellvault, a web-based cloud SSH client that you don't have to download or set up yourself. It has terminal multiplexing, it looks nice by default, and since it's cloud-based, you can administer your servers from any computer without setting up SSH on a new machine.



                            Shellvault.io terminal interface



                            Shellvault is a Software-as-a-Service, so it's not free, but it has free trial so you can see if you like using it. After the 7-day trial, a subscription costs $5/month.






                            share|improve this answer




























                              2














                              Disclaimer: I'm the primary developer for Shellvault.



                              Another option is Shellvault, a web-based cloud SSH client that you don't have to download or set up yourself. It has terminal multiplexing, it looks nice by default, and since it's cloud-based, you can administer your servers from any computer without setting up SSH on a new machine.



                              Shellvault.io terminal interface



                              Shellvault is a Software-as-a-Service, so it's not free, but it has free trial so you can see if you like using it. After the 7-day trial, a subscription costs $5/month.






                              share|improve this answer


























                                2












                                2








                                2







                                Disclaimer: I'm the primary developer for Shellvault.



                                Another option is Shellvault, a web-based cloud SSH client that you don't have to download or set up yourself. It has terminal multiplexing, it looks nice by default, and since it's cloud-based, you can administer your servers from any computer without setting up SSH on a new machine.



                                Shellvault.io terminal interface



                                Shellvault is a Software-as-a-Service, so it's not free, but it has free trial so you can see if you like using it. After the 7-day trial, a subscription costs $5/month.






                                share|improve this answer













                                Disclaimer: I'm the primary developer for Shellvault.



                                Another option is Shellvault, a web-based cloud SSH client that you don't have to download or set up yourself. It has terminal multiplexing, it looks nice by default, and since it's cloud-based, you can administer your servers from any computer without setting up SSH on a new machine.



                                Shellvault.io terminal interface



                                Shellvault is a Software-as-a-Service, so it's not free, but it has free trial so you can see if you like using it. After the 7-day trial, a subscription costs $5/month.







                                share|improve this answer












                                share|improve this answer



                                share|improve this answer










                                answered Aug 28 '18 at 3:30









                                angersonangerson

                                1213




                                1213























                                    1














                                    I use ShellInAbox to access my pc from behind very restrictive firewall using just my browser. I also configure it to go over https like I've wrote here:



                                    ShellInAbox with https using your browser



                                    Also you needed to use dynamic dns service provider like dyndns to be able to pinpoint your PC.






                                    share|improve this answer






























                                      1














                                      I use ShellInAbox to access my pc from behind very restrictive firewall using just my browser. I also configure it to go over https like I've wrote here:



                                      ShellInAbox with https using your browser



                                      Also you needed to use dynamic dns service provider like dyndns to be able to pinpoint your PC.






                                      share|improve this answer




























                                        1












                                        1








                                        1







                                        I use ShellInAbox to access my pc from behind very restrictive firewall using just my browser. I also configure it to go over https like I've wrote here:



                                        ShellInAbox with https using your browser



                                        Also you needed to use dynamic dns service provider like dyndns to be able to pinpoint your PC.






                                        share|improve this answer















                                        I use ShellInAbox to access my pc from behind very restrictive firewall using just my browser. I also configure it to go over https like I've wrote here:



                                        ShellInAbox with https using your browser



                                        Also you needed to use dynamic dns service provider like dyndns to be able to pinpoint your PC.







                                        share|improve this answer














                                        share|improve this answer



                                        share|improve this answer








                                        edited Aug 28 '11 at 9:08

























                                        answered Aug 19 '11 at 23:46









                                        MarkoMarko

                                        774167




                                        774167























                                            0














                                            You should try Bastillion - https://www.bastillion.io You can use multiple terminals simultaneously (like tmux).






                                            share|improve this answer






























                                              0














                                              You should try Bastillion - https://www.bastillion.io You can use multiple terminals simultaneously (like tmux).






                                              share|improve this answer




























                                                0












                                                0








                                                0







                                                You should try Bastillion - https://www.bastillion.io You can use multiple terminals simultaneously (like tmux).






                                                share|improve this answer















                                                You should try Bastillion - https://www.bastillion.io You can use multiple terminals simultaneously (like tmux).







                                                share|improve this answer














                                                share|improve this answer



                                                share|improve this answer








                                                edited Jan 2 at 11:12

























                                                answered May 24 '18 at 9:42









                                                skavanaghskavanagh

                                                11




                                                11






























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