The Problem with AI Terminals Today Every AI terminal tool works the same way: you describe what you want, the AI suggests a command, you copy it, alt-tab, paste it, run it, check the output, alt-tab back, describe the next thing... rinse and repeat. There is a cognitive cost to every context switch. When you are debugging a production issue at 2 AM, those seconds add up. WinkTerm takes a differ
A few years ago I solved 200 LeetCode problems and still froze on Mediums I hadn't seen. The breakthrough wasn't another hundred problems. It was a different loop. A problem asks for the longest substring with at most K distinct characters. You've solved sliding window before. Maximum sum subarray of size K, done. Longest substring without repeating characters, done. This third one stalls you. Twe
Introduction "The best developers have always built their own tools." — The cmux Zen This is the 54th article in the "One Open Source Project a Day" series. Today, we are exploring cmux. If projects like pi-mono or Warp are redefining terminal interaction logic, cmux is building a new "physical space" for the AI Agent era. It is not just another terminal emulator; it is a highly programmable te