Projects that are experimental or daringly innovating the terminal and command line world?
What projects are out there seeking to innovate in the terminal and command line space, and improve or revolutionize the terminal environment?
NuShell is one such example, a shell that uses structured data in its pipelines. Many other experimental shells out there innovating in different spaces.
An even more daring example is DomTerm. It's a terminal emulator with more rich rendering. Supports rich text, images, etc while maintaining xterm compatibility.
Please do not shy from answering projects that are very experimental, early stage, break a lot of backwards compatibility or radically change the current way of doing things.
Warp has really cool features (seems to be beyond LLM?), but what kept me from trying is that its not open source, and seems to have anti privacy features, and VC-funded. It is still a very tempting product, so maybe I will try it.
Can you talk more about zellij? The docs don't really explain much. It seems to be a multiplexer like tmux?
One reason I haven't used multiplexers yet is that I use tiling window managers, and so the tiling is managed by that through separate terminal windows.
Fzf isn't really experimental. It's pretty mature at this point. I found it to be pretty innovative, though, adding an interactive spin to the find program.
I like exploring and learning about innovative software.
Sometimes, I don't know about a problem until I find its solution. For example, before ever using the terminal seriously, I never felt I had any problem working with my computer. Nonetheless, the terminal world has given me a lot of enjoyment and solved a lot of problems around navigating a computer and working with it.
Be aware, most corporate environments running Linux or a UNIX will be using POSIX compliant (or mostly compliant) shells. Fish is fun, but if you aren't comfortable with bash, dash, zsh, and/or AT&T ksh, your time ramping up to supporting the systems will take a lot longer.
Same for those python shells. Handy as hell, but not widely deployed around businesses. So you'd need to be on point with real python skills and POSIX style shells.
If you aren't using, or don't intend to, do any of this for corporate jobs, then sky's the limit and have fun. This is not to say you can't find these in a job somewhere, just that it won't be very common.