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Intelligent Terminal

Microsoft's experimental fork of Windows Terminal integrates native AI agent support, featuring a context-aware agent pane, automatic error detection, and session management.

SourceProduct Hunt AIAuthor: Zac Zuo

Microsoft Terminal: Be What's Next. | Product Hunt

Be What's Next.

5.0•1 review•

57 followers

Be What's Next.

5.0•1 review•

57 followers

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Terminals

Command line tools

Windows Terminal is a terminal emulator for Windows 10 written by Microsoft. It includes support for the Command Prompt, PowerShell, WSL and SSH. After the initial source code release on GitHub, a preview release was first published to the Microsoft Store on June 21, 2019.

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This is the 2nd launch from Microsoft Terminal. View more

Intelligent Terminal

Launching today

Windows Terminal with native agent integration

Intelligent Terminal is an open-source experimental fork of Windows Terminal with native agent integration. It adds an agent status bar, context-aware agent pane, automatic error detection, session management, and command palette prompts for ACP-compatible agent CLIs.

Free

Launch tags:Open Source•Developer Tools•Artificial Intelligence

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Previous Microsoft Terminal Launches

Windows TerminalA new command line interface for Windows machines

Launched on May 7th, 2019

5.0

Based on 1 review

Review Microsoft Terminal?

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Hi everyone!

MS has an experimental fork of Windows Terminal. It adds a docked agent pane that has context from your shell output, can detect command errors, and lets you manage multiple agent sessions.

Currently defaults to @Github Copilot CLI but supports other ACP-compatible agents (connected mine with @Gemini). One notable thing is that they’re shipping it as a completely separate app instead of putting it into the main terminal.

Your agent reads the shell output directly, removing the need to copy and paste errors back and forth. Is that a good reason to try, or will you just stick to standalone CLI agents?

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5h ago

@zaczuo Since it ships as a separate app, how do you handle window state/persistence across sessions and is there a path to merge the pain into the main terminal center, or is the separation intentional for safety and compliance?

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2h ago

•7 reviews

A breath of fresh air for working in the console on Windows, it looks nice and runs smoothly. If you're on Windows, it's now the only way you should be handling terminals.

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20 views2yr ago