I enjoy what they're going for with Hyper, but being an electron app makes it very heavy for a terminal emulator. When I tried it I ended up back on iTerm (Mac, not Linux). Maybe it's worth taking another look, but my terminal is one of the few things I want to be very performant and lightweight.
When you're running a docker stack at 10 containers, a web browser, a code editor, a terminal emulator with numerous tabs, design software, communication tools... 150MB starts to matter a bit.
150 MB for an application without any demanding features matters a lot. Imagine any other application you have taking 75x the amount of memory from an alternative one.
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I enjoy what they're going for with Hyper, but being an electron app makes it very heavy for a terminal emulator. When I tried it I ended up back on iTerm (Mac, not Linux). Maybe it's worth taking another look, but my terminal is one of the few things I want to be very performant and lightweight.
I agree with that as my Gnome terminal takes around 2MB whereas this one takes 150 MB.
However, given the latest hardware situation. I don't think that matters.
It works just fine.
When you're running a docker stack at 10 containers, a web browser, a code editor, a terminal emulator with numerous tabs, design software, communication tools... 150MB starts to matter a bit.
10 Docker containers and 75X RAM consumption.
This hyperbolic encounter amuses me.
MetaHumansAreReal
150 MB for an application without any demanding features matters a lot. Imagine any other application you have taking 75x the amount of memory from an alternative one.