Looking forward to trying this tomorrow. Anyone has tried it on their macs?
Oof. An always online terminal with an AI that does who knows what with the things you type? I don’t think so.
Also, Open Sourcing the client but not the server seems like marketing at best.
A quick Wikipedia also says that they basically run on investor money. Including Sam Altman and Jeff Weiner, the CEO of LinkedIn who had three massive data breaches in as many years.
That’s a hard pass for me.
It does look beautiful though
I don’t think this is for me. My workflow is buildt around existing tools for solving the issues Warp tries to solve. Like, you know, the shells historyfile.
That said, I hope whoever likes it, really likes it, and that it revolutionize their work.
It’s not actually open source (yet), and some AI bullshit. Hard nope from me.
I really don’t get it though. Most of the time I run the same few command. cd and ls a bunch, SSH to some servers, docker-compose up, invoke a build script, pacman -Syyu, and the occasional grep. Maybe I’ll curl if I’m feeling feisty.
For the times I do need to do something more complicated, I guess chatgpt might help, but I don’t need it fully integrated into an always online terminal that I have to log into and pay for.
STOP. FUCKING. NAMING. EVERYTHING. WARP.
I’m gonna be that guy:
Why am I supposed to be excited for this?
I dug around their site to try and answer your question for myself. Nothing I saw would make me want to switch terminals (I’m content with whatever built-in comes with the OS, usually), but it has some interesting flashy bits:
- “Warp AI” is ChatGPT baked into the app. Might be handy for certain situations, but it’s online only soooooo why wouldn’t I just use ddg?
- “Warp Drive” is a way to make / organize / share user scripts. Seems to be focused on team-based sharing.
- the app separates commands into blocks, which might make scripting faster/easier for some people.
If I felt lost in the terminal, a lot of these features would be attractive to me.