“Ghostty Is Native—So What?” written by a core Neovim maintainer and long-time Ghostty beta member. In his own words: “I wrote this after seeing so many people online dismiss (or not understand) Ghostty's native OS integration. In my opinion, that is one of the best things about Ghostty (certainly on macOS)”. https://gpanders.com/blog/ghostty-is-native-so-what/ https://gpanders.com/blog/ghostty-is-native-so-what/
Ghostty Is Native—So What? | g.p. anders

Ghostty is a new terminal emulator by Mitchell Hashimoto. While a lot has been said about Ghostty’s performance, less discussed is its native platform1 integration which is, in my opinion, its most distinctive and underrated feature. Despite being listed as a key motivating factor in Mitchell’s original introduction, online discussions about Ghostty rarely mention its native integration, and when they do many commenters remain skeptical over its importance or don’t understand what that means.

@mitchellh Hey Mitchell, do you ever plan to support Windows? Unfortunately some of us are stuck with this crappy OS
@mugsaurus @mitchellh It will come post 1.0, but will probably require community members to help drive support

@mugsaurus in a podcast he explained that Windows support will come, but after 1.0

https://changelog.com/podcast/622

We ain't afraid of no Ghostty! with Mitchell Hashimoto (Changelog Interviews #622)

Mitchell Hashimoto joins the show to discuss Ghostty, the newest terminal in town. Mitchell co-founded HashiCorp, took it all the way to IPO, exited in 2023—and now he's working on a terminal emulator called Ghostty. Ghostty is set to 1.0 this month, so we sat down to talk through all the details.

Changelog
@kalle thanks for the info and reference :)

@mitchellh Excitement leveled up!

(At most?) 10 more days…

@mitchellh Thanks for making a Mac-Assed Mac app, having it exist is going to be a win for everyone with an interest in decent Mac apps, even if they don’t use it directly.