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Comment by Asooka

5 days ago

I wonder how long until terminals support half of the XWindows protocol (as some weird combination of Markdown, HTML and escape codes, most probably). This is not a diss, I would actually be pretty happy with a pared-down GUI protocol in the terminal with extensive Unicode support.

2052: the whole of computing is VT100-compatible Javascript CLI applications running on a Javascript port of the Linux kernel, within a tab of Chromium.

This is the actual end game of the worse is better philosophy.

  • It's 9front actually. VT100 it's killed except for legacy plaforms, it's seen like CP/M and Altair emulators where looked upon 1995-2000.

    9front's libc with a minimal desktop based on a tweaked rio(1) and a taskbar plus a really simple file manager won. People god fed up of FX' and bells and whistles everywhere. A minimal RTF editor with simple options plus a simple spreadsheet with rc/awk support does things much faster. Oh, and, of course, you can damn bind/import devices (video cards, network cards, whole networks) from anywhere to anywhere with IPV6 and quantum networks.

    Old GNU/Linuxen, OpenBSD et all are just virtualized at crazy speeds under photonic CPU's.

    There's no SSH, just rcpu and quantum-secured factotum(1). Photonic GPU's and neural network devices just boot 9front themselves too, with zero delay. Forget VPN's, too. These are obsolete too.

well iTerm2 now has a #&*%( web browser built in...

  • Yes! Hoping I can get Neomutt to render HTML email without resorting to launching a browser.

    Since URLs are clickable in iTerm, you have the option to view a webpage in the terminal.

    • By "browser" here, you mean lynx or links or w3m etc, right?

      Assuming so, what would be the benefit of rendering within neomutt instead of lynx?

  • Does "calling a system provided-component" (WKWebView) count as "built-in"?

    • Clicking a link to launch an external web browser: no

      Viewing a webview inside the app itself: yes