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I use Rxvt-unicode, only because I don't use a DE (just xmonad). It works fine with what I need (screen, irssi and vim), and it is fairly light. Previously I used eterm, but I found it a bit heavy.

So, What's your preference when it comes to terminal emulators? Gnome-terminal? xterm? Why?

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13 Answers

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Terminal on snow leopard, xfce-terminal on linux, kitty (putty branch) on windows.

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I use urxvt on linux, because it's pretty lightweight, supports transparency, unicode symbols, has built in perl scripting... When i have to work from windows box i use PuTTY

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gnome-terminal in linux. Mainly because of the tab support - I especially like that you can detach tabs by dragging them.

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Mac OS X - iTerm because you can get rid of the scrollbars (I hate them in on term)

Linux - gnome-terminal because of its support for clickable URL's and great selection/paste support. I want something lighter but havn't been able to find anything with the same amount of features. I also love their transparency implementation.

Windows - rxvt under cygwin. Support for transparency is great and it makes me feel at home like I'm on a *nix box.

I've alway's been suprised that their has not been more innovation in the world of terminal emulator's. As dependent every *nix system with X installed is on them, and how much time is spent using them it seems like they would be packed with great features and awesome UI's. I guess, it's not necessarily broken, so no need to fix it.

Brian G.

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Gnome Terminal on Linux
1. easy to customize, looks great
2. is the default for Ubuntu
3. tabs are well, it is overall intuitive (especially copy/pasting)

Console on Windows
1. it is easier to use and more minimalistic than PuTTY
2. can easily use any backend (cmd.exe, bash.exe, etc)
3. integrates nicely into the desktop
4. great profile support (can create shortcuts for different setups)

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xterm.

1) It's as lightweight as you can get. 2) it's always available 3) it has some advanced key combinations to change things like font sizes on the fly.

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I use Konsole because of mainly two features:

  • tabbed terminals
  • profiles to launch something else in a tab than just my default shell
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Terminal.app on OS X

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Putty for linux.

PSTools "psexec \\pcname -i cmd" for windows. (that function opens up the remote command console locally)

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I used to use kermit-95 as the terminal emulation was comprehensive, and it was very scriptable.

I now use PuTTY on windows.

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gnome-terminal on Linux, PuTTY on Windows.

PuTTY is great and it's free.

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Konsole on Linux, PuTTY on Windows.

PuTTY is real nice. Snappier and more stable than RXVT for Windows. Konsole is the default terminal for KDE and it is fine. It also has tabs for multiple sessions which is nice.

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I use PuTTY, primarily because it's free, but also because it has quite a few nifty features.

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