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Start all of your commands with a comma

https://rhodesmill.org/brandon/2009/commands-with-comma/
100•theblazehen•2d ago•22 comments

OpenCiv3: Open-source, cross-platform reimagining of Civilization III

https://openciv3.org/
654•klaussilveira•13h ago•189 comments

The Waymo World Model

https://waymo.com/blog/2026/02/the-waymo-world-model-a-new-frontier-for-autonomous-driving-simula...
944•xnx•19h ago•549 comments

How we made geo joins 400× faster with H3 indexes

https://floedb.ai/blog/how-we-made-geo-joins-400-faster-with-h3-indexes
119•matheusalmeida•2d ago•29 comments

What Is Ruliology?

https://writings.stephenwolfram.com/2026/01/what-is-ruliology/
38•helloplanets•4d ago•38 comments

Unseen Footage of Atari Battlezone Arcade Cabinet Production

https://arcadeblogger.com/2026/02/02/unseen-footage-of-atari-battlezone-cabinet-production/
47•videotopia•4d ago•1 comments

Show HN: Look Ma, No Linux: Shell, App Installer, Vi, Cc on ESP32-S3 / BreezyBox

https://github.com/valdanylchuk/breezydemo
227•isitcontent•14h ago•25 comments

Jeffrey Snover: "Welcome to the Room"

https://www.jsnover.com/blog/2026/02/01/welcome-to-the-room/
13•kaonwarb•3d ago•17 comments

Monty: A minimal, secure Python interpreter written in Rust for use by AI

https://github.com/pydantic/monty
219•dmpetrov•14h ago•113 comments

Show HN: I spent 4 years building a UI design tool with only the features I use

https://vecti.com
327•vecti•16h ago•143 comments

Sheldon Brown's Bicycle Technical Info

https://www.sheldonbrown.com/
378•ostacke•19h ago•94 comments

Hackers (1995) Animated Experience

https://hackers-1995.vercel.app/
487•todsacerdoti•21h ago•240 comments

Microsoft open-sources LiteBox, a security-focused library OS

https://github.com/microsoft/litebox
359•aktau•20h ago•181 comments

Show HN: If you lose your memory, how to regain access to your computer?

https://eljojo.github.io/rememory/
286•eljojo•16h ago•167 comments

An Update on Heroku

https://www.heroku.com/blog/an-update-on-heroku/
409•lstoll•20h ago•275 comments

Vocal Guide – belt sing without killing yourself

https://jesperordrup.github.io/vocal-guide/
21•jesperordrup•4h ago•12 comments

Dark Alley Mathematics

https://blog.szczepan.org/blog/three-points/
87•quibono•4d ago•21 comments

PC Floppy Copy Protection: Vault Prolok

https://martypc.blogspot.com/2024/09/pc-floppy-copy-protection-vault-prolok.html
59•kmm•5d ago•4 comments

Where did all the starships go?

https://www.datawrapper.de/blog/science-fiction-decline
3•speckx•3d ago•2 comments

Delimited Continuations vs. Lwt for Threads

https://mirageos.org/blog/delimcc-vs-lwt
31•romes•4d ago•3 comments

How to effectively write quality code with AI

https://heidenstedt.org/posts/2026/how-to-effectively-write-quality-code-with-ai/
250•i5heu•16h ago•194 comments

Was Benoit Mandelbrot a hedgehog or a fox?

https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.01122
15•bikenaga•3d ago•3 comments

Introducing the Developer Knowledge API and MCP Server

https://developers.googleblog.com/introducing-the-developer-knowledge-api-and-mcp-server/
56•gfortaine•11h ago•23 comments

I now assume that all ads on Apple news are scams

https://kirkville.com/i-now-assume-that-all-ads-on-apple-news-are-scams/
1062•cdrnsf•23h ago•444 comments

Why I Joined OpenAI

https://www.brendangregg.com/blog/2026-02-07/why-i-joined-openai.html
144•SerCe•9h ago•133 comments

Learning from context is harder than we thought

https://hy.tencent.com/research/100025?langVersion=en
180•limoce•3d ago•97 comments

Understanding Neural Network, Visually

https://visualrambling.space/neural-network/
287•surprisetalk•3d ago•41 comments

I spent 5 years in DevOps – Solutions engineering gave me what I was missing

https://infisical.com/blog/devops-to-solutions-engineering
147•vmatsiiako•18h ago•67 comments

Show HN: R3forth, a ColorForth-inspired language with a tiny VM

https://github.com/phreda4/r3
72•phreda4•13h ago•14 comments

Female Asian Elephant Calf Born at the Smithsonian National Zoo

https://www.si.edu/newsdesk/releases/female-asian-elephant-calf-born-smithsonians-national-zoo-an...
29•gmays•9h ago•12 comments
Open in hackernews

Cool-retro-term: terminal emulator which mimics look and feel of CRTs

https://github.com/Swordfish90/cool-retro-term
298•michalpleban•2mo ago

Comments

pimlottc•2mo ago
People go so overboard on this stuff, the amount of ghosting on the DOS example is insane. I don’t want to spoils anyone’s fun but that’s not really what most screens looked like back then.
Aldipower•2mo ago
Damn, now I do not have fun with it anymore.
dylan604•2mo ago
depends on how the brightness/contrast was set on the tube. if someone came in to a screen that was off and did not allow it enough time to warm up, it was common to see people adjust these knobs in the mornings. eventually, the tube would warm up, and things would just be too bright.
weinzierl•2mo ago
The single most annoying thing with these old displays was the flicker. Whenever I use one of my real old home computer era monitors it is the only thing that makes it unbearable after a while.

But I'm not surprised they don't go overboard with that in the emulators. They'd probably have to add PSE warnings if they did.

bitwize•2mo ago
My sister tried to go through broadcast school, with great difficulty especially when she got through the video editing classes. Turns out she has photosensitive epilepsy and all the exposure to CRT monitors made her quite ill. You couldn't convince her to go back to the CRT days for all the tea in China.
sidewndr46•2mo ago
if you're talking about cutting edge CRTs, many of the last generation actually beat flat panels for years. Some may still in some aspects.

There were plenty of junk CRTs out there used for text only display with insane levels of persistence and other issues that lead to a very unique appearance. It's also sort of moot at this point. The existing CRTs out there that have this behavior have degraded over the years. No one makes new high persistence CRTs that I am aware of. So it's mostly down to our memory of them.

I actually have a flat panel that has over 2 decades degraded and now has some weird persistence going on.

Sharlin•2mo ago
CRTs still run circles around basic cheapo TN panels when it comes to color fidelity, dynamic range, viewing angles, and refresh rate. Upper-mid-to-high-end LCD screens have gotten vastly better, but the baseline is still pretty low.
poke646•2mo ago
It's almost like a caricature of a CRT. I can see the novelty, but hope that people aren't lead to believe monitors looked like this.

I think what bothers me most is the horizontal line that slowly moves across the screen every few seconds. It's an artifact of recording a CRT on film and doesn't occur when you look at a real monitor...

rbanffy•2mo ago
It could happen in home computers connected through the antenna input. I think if power was slightly off the desired frequency this could also happen, but we’d need to test.
ack_complete•2mo ago
It also happens with digital cameras for similar reasons, due to CCD scanning. But yeah, that doesn't happen looking directly at a CRT.

The bloom is also too blobby, because it's a gaussian blur. I ran into the same issue trying to implement a similar effect. The bloom shape needs to sharper to look realistic -- which also means unfortunately a non-separable blur.

derefr•2mo ago
A horizontal-line artifact (not the one depicted in the shader) could totally happen, if you were over-driving a monitor with a higher pixel clock than it was happy with. With this kind of artifact, the two halves of the image would also be slightly horizontally misaligned with respect to one-another, too.
alnwlsn•2mo ago
Most of them weren't, but some were. If all you were doing was looking at screens of text, a long persistence phosphor could be desirable[0].

I've got one that is inside an Apple II monitor. Can confirm, the image looks very flicker-free, but has pretty bad ghosting if you're looking at anything that scrolls. It looks cool but is pretty rough to do any work on. The other green CRTs I have are barely more persistent than a regular black and white TV, and I've never heard of a long persistence color monitor.

[0] - http://www.trs-80.org/soft-view-crt.html

nacozarina•2mo ago
this is like looking at a monitor that spent 6 years as a security desk monitor before you got it
cvcbir•2mo ago
> that’s not really what most screens looked like back then

Agreed. It’s sad but I think that unless you were born in the 70s, you may not be old enough to have seen enough CRT terminals to know the difference.

We need at least one CRT terminal in each city so that kids have a chance to experience a real one.

crims0n•2mo ago
Don’t underestimate how many of us were raised in hand-me-down computers.
defrost•2mo ago
Those of us born in the 60s also recall many variations of CRT terminals.

I had a lot of fun with Tektronix 4010 series storage-tube CRT terminals.

In real life they had crisp lines and rarely any perceivable flicker (depended how far you pushed the ray trace line length)

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tektronix_4010

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2SbCIP1m6hs

You could drive them (in my experience at least) with a PDP-11, an Apple ][, a BBC micro, or a transputer breadboard.

Aeolun•2mo ago
Lolwut. I had a CRT TV until well into university, and that was around 2009. CRT’s aren’t that old yet. They just disappeared almost overnight.
spankibalt•2mo ago
> "I don’t want to spoils anyone’s fun but that’s not really what most screens looked like back then."

I don't really see the problem with what's written on the tin here; it's called retro-term and not vintage- or classic-term, after all (I didn't read the project's webpage). In other words: It's correctly advertised as something new that's just fashioned on something from yesteryear. So you can really go overboard with technically inaccurate, kitschy glitchshit that's so popular with crowd. Of course, historically challenged people will fall into the trappings of a romantically distorted past they never were a part of. As they always did and always will. But that's just life.

saltcured•2mo ago
> romantically distorted past

Amusing that it can lead to a romantically distorted future for those terminal users.

As someone who came up in that era, I would never want to regain those barrel distortions or incoherent pixels I saw in some of the heavy-handed retro terminals. I paid good money for flatter CRTs and also jumped to LCD with a digital input (DVI) as soon as it was a general option I could justify on a work computer order.

I'm also happy not to be hearing the constant whine of CRT coils, HDD drive motors, or even so many cooling fans these days.

Anamon•2mo ago
I miss degaussing.
saltcured•2mo ago
Sure, but that's not continuous and whiny.

It's more like your grumpy livestock grunting once before it leans into a hard day of work in the tech field.

derefr•2mo ago
Most screens, no. But that one half-dead trash-picked screen that stands out in your memory as emblematic of that time in your life when you were building computers with your own two hands? Certainly.
gblargg•2mo ago
Presumably the examples have the effect ramped up so it can easily be seen even on smaller screens.
ctenb•2mo ago
2023: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36798774

2022: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=30734137

2018: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17413911

2015: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9093545

2014: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=8399461

LeFantome•2mo ago
Sad that we missed 2024 esepcially since the 2023 guy explicitly asked for it. Second comment predicted 2026 for a next post--missed it by a month!
jama211•2mo ago
I’m so glad this was reposted as I haven’t seen it before and I love it!
goody71•2mo ago
Cool. I hadn't seen it or knew about it until this 2025 post.
graiz•2mo ago
Cool project, love the visuals. Wish it would merge as a plugin or something to a project like http://ghostty.org/ while I appreciate the visual fun, there are other pragmatic tools beyond visuals that are handy.
Diti•2mo ago
Ghostty already supports shaders and effects like this.
aduitsis•2mo ago
It can only apply shader(s) to the current frame I think. To produce the crt ghosting you'd probably need access to the previous frame (not an expert).
throitallaway•2mo ago
I've tried the shaders in the following repo with ghostty. They definitely work. I ended up keeping a cursor trail shader. https://github.com/0xhckr/ghostty-shaders
aduitsis•2mo ago
Yes, correct! If you check out https://ghostty.org/docs/config/reference, the iPreviousCursor is available, so it can be used against the iCurrentCursor to produce a fading effect. But I think the entire previous framebuffer isn't there (yet).
rbanffy•2mo ago
I think the best thing that could happen would be to be able to add shaders to windows in Wayland.

When MacOS 9 was a thing, I had an extension called “out of context menus” that added options such as “Gaussian blur” the the context menus so you could blur a window.

rootbear•2mo ago
It's fun to play around with, but unless I'm missing something, it's not possible to specify the size, in rows and columns, of the screen, such as 24x80. It's an odd omission.
dylan604•2mo ago
Just like back in the day, this would cause me to tire so much faster than I normally do. These things are "cute", but for actually getting shit done, they are an annoyance. Does anyone use something like this for extended periods of time? The clarity of modern terminals is a godsend.
Shadow_Death•2mo ago
I think it's the blurry text. I installed it once and used it maybe twice. I found that I spent most of my time squinting at the screen like I needed to put my glasses on. I had to quit using it because my face hurt from squinting the whole time.
layer8•2mo ago
In real life, monochrome monitors were sharper than color CRTs.
rbanffy•2mo ago
When the task is boring, making your terminal look cool helps.
dylan604•2mo ago
sounds like one might have the wrong job then to me.

if your task is boring, update the desktop's background. if your task is boring, spend hours upon hours choosing which font is better for your IDE/terminal. if your task is boring, you'll find anything to put off doing the task

rbanffy•2mo ago
The trick is wasting the least amount of time making your task interesting.
wanderingstan•2mo ago
I used this extensively in a past job where I had to have have a ton of terminals open and monitor/use them all, with each one serving a different role. (We were prototyping some really complicated experiences) I used this tool to give each terminal a distinctive “look”, with some coding for effects. E.G. all green screens were backends, different fonts for the different OSs, etc. It looked wild while in use, but really did help.
jauntywundrkind•2mo ago
Side question, was there a reason early CRT screens were amber? Or was this perhaps maybe downstream of PLATO & the first plasma (and touch) screens being a Friendly Orange Glow?

Recommending Friendly Orange Glow (Doer, 2018), btw. Fun read. https://www.penguinrandomhouse.com/books/545610/the-friendly...

Cyan488•2mo ago
The color of the screens is related to the phosphor used to coat the back of the screen, which is excited to glow by the electron beam. According to wiki, amber was used as an "eye-friendly" ergonomic color for similar reasons we use blue blocking filters today.
dboreham•2mo ago
In some cases the color was just a filter in front of a white phosphor screen.
Cockbrand•2mo ago
IIRC, amber was considered the most eye friendly color back then. The cheaper monochrome screens were green-on-black.
csixty4•2mo ago
The brain perceives amber as a "bright" color that contrasts well with black, without the headaches that come from staring at white light for hours.
dboreham•2mo ago
Amber was fairly unusual. More common to see white or green.
acuozzo•2mo ago
Amber was fairly common to see in US public libraries.
indymike•2mo ago
There was a considerable debate on the ergonomics of terminal colors, where the pseudoscience said green and amber were the best... and white wasn’t very good. I’m not sure what the truth was. Adding a couple of inches to the 12-inch screens of the time would have made a bigger difference in eye fatigue than phosphor color. That said, there was something magical about glowing phosphor...
com2kid•2mo ago
I used to daily drive this, most of the effects were minimized but I found that a little bit of white noise really helped make my terminal a lot easier on the eyes to read. I wonder if it is related to how some people find that film grain has a pleasing effect.

For those looking at the screenshots note that the terminal is incredibly customizable, you don't have to have all the effects dialed up to 11!

Sadly bit rot has set in and the project doesn't work that well now days. Also a lack of tab support really hurts it as a daily driving terminal.

Aldipower•2mo ago
Having the same with audio. I actually like tape hiss. :-O
SoftTalker•2mo ago
... and the crackles and pops of a vinyl record?
l1ng0•2mo ago
I miss the old phonecall background hiss, now it's impossible to tell the difference between someone being silent in a call and a disconnected 'line'.
catskull•2mo ago
I have ghostty set up with this “starfield” shader: https://github.com/0xhckr/ghostty-shaders/blob/main/starfiel...

I also have it set up to do adaptive theme, so in light mode the galaxy is mostly just a little noise on the black text but in dark mode it’s like I’m piloting a space ship. Highly recommend.

I also documented a few other shaders on my blog here: https://catskull.net/fun-with-ghostty-shaders.html

Edit: I use the "starfield" shader, not the "galaxy" shader. Doh!

nemomarx•2mo ago
oh that water one is cute. makes me think of old gnome effects? I wonder how distracting it is in practice
lexicality•2mo ago
Bit disappointed that Galaxy is the only one without a preview, what does it look like?
cupofjoakim•2mo ago
an image is available in the PR where it was added: https://github.com/0xhckr/ghostty-shaders/pull/30
catskull•2mo ago
lol I'm smart apparently. It's not the "galaxy" shader, it's the "starfield" shader! I should double check before commenting I guess.

https://github.com/0xhckr/ghostty-shaders/blob/main/starfiel...

I'm not sure what "galaxy" looks like but it might not have worked or shown nothing.

lexicality•2mo ago
Oh, that one's really pretty! I actually went to check if wezterm supported shaders after seeing the preview on your site, but tragically it doesn't.
velcrovan•2mo ago
If only the “just snow” one would have had the snow floating down (instead of, inexplicably, up)!
volemo•2mo ago
Simply rotate your monitor. /j
phatskat•2mo ago
The shader is pretty small, I bet a little fiddling with changing minuses to plus signs would fix that right up (or down)!
keyle•2mo ago
I added DIRECTION, and use it agains the `q`. 0.25 makes them fall slowly.

    #define DIRECTION 0.25

    // usage:
    vec2 q = DIRECTION * uv * (1.0 + fi * DEPTH);
be sure to tweak the rest, it's fun!
phatskat•2mo ago
Thanks for reminding me that ghostty supports shaders! Now to find a good one with scanlines…
echo_time•2mo ago
This is fantastic - but I encountered something strange. I was searching `ghostty per window shader` and your site came up as the first hit. Excellent - however, this was the text under the link:

Fun with Ghostty Shaders 22 Feb 2025 — Ghostty doesn't directly support shaders, but a repo with shaders can be cloned to ~/.config/ghostty/shaders. Examples include 'drunkard+retro- ...

Now, no where in the text on the site does it say this - so did google just wrongly summarize and put it in as "website text". To be clear, this isn't an AI overview - its in the main list of links! Maybe this has been happening and i just missed it but its absurd! It doesn't even fit with the text! Thanks for the resource, again, had a lot of fun with that.

catskull•2mo ago
What the crap is going on with this. Is Google just blindly making stuff up these days? Why would it show some preview text that doesn’t exist on the page.
Anamon•2mo ago
Maybe they noticed that everybody ignores/downvotes/hates/hides the AI overviews, so the next attempt to force people to see them is to replace descriptions and previews with generated summaries?
hasperdi•2mo ago
Fun fact, you can use Ghostty and vibecode the shader you want. In fact, the other day I used Claude Code to create me a custom CRT shader.
timeforcomputer•2mo ago
I love it because I have glare/doubling around words. Adding some visual noise can mask my own eye problems, and adding some visual effects with the glowbar and jittering if I feel like it, can really make it easier to focus for some reason.
lelanthran•2mo ago
> Also a lack of tab support really hurts it as a daily driving terminal.

For some, perhaps.

I've not needed tabbed terminals ever since vim got proper terminal support. I run shells within vim, so have them in splits, tabs, etc in a plain xterm.

Sorta like a tmux replacement, but with better editor support :-)

esseph•2mo ago
You hardcore vim folks are a different breed :-)
lelanthran•2mo ago
> You hardcore vim folks are a different breed :-)

Nah, we're just lazy :-)

Need a shell? Why leave vim? Need to connect to and issue SQL queries to diagnose a database? Why leave Vim?

The actual hardcore folk are those Emacs weenies.

Need a shell? Use Emacs.

Read email? Use Emacs.

Manage my calendar? Emacs.

Note taking? Static website builder? Browse websites? Git client?

Emacs, Emacs, Emacs and (you guessed it) Emacs.

Spreadsheet, File manager, Remote editing, Calculator, Dictionary/Thesaurus ... all Emacs.

Those guys seriously need a therapist ... of course, Emacs has that too (Good 'ol M-x doctor)

elcritch•2mo ago
Emacs even has its own Vim emulator to solve Emacs lack of an editor!
elcritch•2mo ago
It'd be awesome to run something like this headless, maybe with a frame buffer. I setup my home lab with Freebsd recently and it's just sitting there without a cool CRT screen. :/
technothrasher•2mo ago
Not quite this extreme, but I usually use the old Sun console font in my terminal windows, because I'm an old fart and it makes me happy. Someone at work just the other day looked at my screen and said, "What the heck is wrong with your terminal window???"
em-bee•2mo ago
do you have a link to download it? or a package name?
rbanffy•2mo ago
It should get a modern version. IIRC, Luxi Mono was close.
em-bee•2mo ago
which is a historic X11 font:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luxi_fonts

interesting

brirec•2mo ago
Whoa, this sent me back. I cut my teeth on Red Hat Linux 5.2 (pre-RHEL), and I remember when they first added Bluecurve… oh jeez, this means im old, doesn’t it?
anthk•2mo ago
Current Go fonts are really close to Luxi but being under a TTF format.
technothrasher•2mo ago
https://github.com/NanoBillion/gallant
em-bee•2mo ago
thanks. just found that too, linked from here: https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/307356/what-is-the-...
redwall_hp•2mo ago
I set my terminal windows and such to Monaco, because it was the default Apple monospace font from 1984 until 2009.
NunoSempere•2mo ago
I have a regular reminder to use this every now and then because it lifts my mood consistenly :)
shevy-java•2mo ago
I'd kind of want a terminal that can be used for everything, including browsing, image display, playing videos and so forth. KDE konsole is good but I don't see any logical reason why I need to simulate 1980s terminals in 2025. Right now I use KDE konsole to either display something on the terminal or start some other program (such as gimp etc...) but I'd like the interface to actually be the terminal in itself, as-is.
naikrovek•2mo ago
Plan9 “terminals” were like that. Create a window, and by default the text shell runs in it. If you have vdir installed, and you run that in the same window, you get a semi-graphical file browser. Exit that and then run games/doom and now doom is running in the same window. Exit that and “cpu” into another machine and run riostart and now that same window that did all the other things now is running a window manager on the remote machine, displayed on your machine. Graphical apps, textual apps, everything. All in Rio windows. Smoothly, too. (It is a very different paradigm so I am not going to profess that it is user friendly or anything, but it does work, and it works well once you get your head around it.)
teddyh•2mo ago
See also the MGR Window System: <https://hack.org/~mc/mgr/>
rbanffy•2mo ago
I contribute to this project (they use my 3278 font) but I think the best way to do this would be to have shaders available to compositor windows. This way, any terminal app (or video player) could tap into a library of CRT shaders.

The only thing missing would be frame-to-frame data availability to make persistence possible - Windows Terminal has shaders, but they can’t access the previous frame.

krautburglar•2mo ago
I believe compositors like picom can already do this.

ctrl+f shader

https://man.archlinux.org/man/picom.1.en

rbanffy•2mo ago
Now all we need is to add that to Wayland.
krautburglar•2mo ago
Both X11 and Wayland need a coherent accessibility on-ramp first. I know AI can remedy many of the issues after-the-fact, but it is an embarrassment that we need to go that far when the text and the partitioning are already known at different layers of the stack.
rufus_foreman•2mo ago
I forgot I had this installed, thanks for the reminder!
ok123456•2mo ago
Neat to use for a few minutes as a novelty/toy. Not something I'd do daily, though. I remember trying it out years ago, and it would peg the CPU at 100%.
nurettin•2mo ago
It works consistently around 5-6% cpu for me. (I have gpu drivers installed) Also, it is my go-to terminal for claude.
gorgoiler•2mo ago
I believe hyprland has a shader that will do CRT emulation for the entire drawing surface:

https://github.com/DemonKingSwarn/retro-hyprland

I haven’t used it and have no idea if it works. Now that my eyes are shot I don’t mind losing fidelity for a bit of atmospherics when doing some casual computing (eg checking email with Pine like it’s 1999.)

If I weren’t so lovingly tied to niri I would like to give this shader a go. Nostalgia is one hell of a drug.

zozbot234•2mo ago
It doesn't quite seem to have the same effects, though. It would be nice to see cool-retro-term's extreme CRT effects implemented in an all-points-addressable low-res mode. Perhaps it could even be made to run as a Wayland compositor, similar to hyprland.
fnord77•2mo ago
brew:

cool-retro-term has been deprecated because it does not pass the macOS Gatekeeper check! It will be disabled on 2026-09-01.

blueflow•2mo ago
There is a thing that cool-retro-term is lacking: Letters showing up on the screen the instant you press the keyboard button.
youngNed•2mo ago
As a user of a dec vt220 on a college vax vms, I can assure you, that did not happen on all old hardware.
burnte•2mo ago
Depends on your definition of instant. The lag has seemed normal in CRT for me, and I've been using it for years.
bmurphy1976•2mo ago
I like the idea and used it for a couple years, but the lack of functionality was a bummer.

Ghostty with shaders on the other hand gives me all the functionality AND the effects. Some people may not have figured this out yet but you can stack multiple shaders on top of each to get some really cool combination effects.

umvi•2mo ago
Have any videos or pictures you can share?
suoloordi•2mo ago
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=enwDjM7pNNE
tomcam•2mo ago
Super fun but so much not for me. Fricking awesome if you're in the TV or movie business trying to get that effect right. Reminds me of the first time my artist kid used the term "pixel art", which in my memory brings back only frustration from my 1980s restriction to 2, 4, then 16 colors. I love unlimited colors, thank you very much. And I remember being grateful to pay $1,000 for a flat screen monitor around 1995 or so. I adore the crispness of digital output.

Again, not criticizing this effort. Just saying that I love being here in the 21st, thank you very much.

archargelod•2mo ago
Looks nice and pretty light on resources.

But it seems buggy at rendering some unicode characters, I use vertical line[0] for my indentation guides in Neovim, and they look outright hideous in cool-retro-term[1]

[0] https://www.compart.com/en/unicode/U+007C

[1] https://lensdump.com/i/f6qna1

korrectional•2mo ago
I wonder if this could run proprely on WSL
kazinator•2mo ago
The phosphor fading in the demo images is unrealistically slow.

It actually resembles early LCDs more than CRTs!

Undoubtedly, that must be a parameter you can tweak.

enriquto•2mo ago
if this got sixel support it would be just perfect! I would use it for everything
teddyh•2mo ago
See also “Phosphor”¹, a screen saver, part of XScreenSaver², but also usable as a terminal:

  /usr/libexec/xscreensaver/phosphor -scale 2 -delay 0 -program $SHELL
1. <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G6ZWTrl7pV0>

2. <https://www.jwz.org/xscreensaver/>

arionmiles•2mo ago
Wow the owner of the XScreenSaver really hates HN lol...
stared•2mo ago
It reminds me of Jupiter Hell roguelike (with a tagline "like chess, but played with a shotgun").

It's screen: https://shared.fastly.steamstatic.com/store_item_assets/stea...

iammattmurphy•2mo ago
lol that’s the smallest image I’ve ever seen Looks like a cool game though, I enjoy a roguelike
stared•2mo ago
My bad, I accidentally posted thumbnail. I meant: https://shared.fastly.steamstatic.com/store_item_assets/stea...
VikingCoder•2mo ago
My co-worker Mike and I had our monitors set up back-to-back. When he wanted my attention, he'd degauss his monitor.
NoSalt•2mo ago
My "greyed-out" link tells me this was posted not long ago.
Pet_Ant•2mo ago
Would be nice if this could be a plug-in for GhostTTY
aidenn0•2mo ago
My first machine had a monochrome 720x348 amber display, and the amber mode on this really takes me back.
code-e•2mo ago
Is there some general purpose (linux) software that could apply these kind of post-processing effects to my any terminal? Or failing that, my whole screen?