Ghostty 1.3 is now out! Scrollback search, native scrollbars, click-to-move cursor, rich clipboard copy, AppleScript, split drag/drop, Unicode 17 and international text improvements, massive performance improvements, and hundreds more changes. https://ghostty.org/docs/install/release-notes/1-3-0
About Ghostty

Ghostty
@mitchellh congrats!!🎉🎈
@mitchellh Yay!! Still no link hints, though, right? :[

@mitchellh Please add a sentence like “Ghostty is a fast, feature-rich, and cross-platform terminal emulator that uses platform-native UI and GPU acceleration.” At the start or end of the post.

Background: https://infosec.exchange/@masek/115683456728125923

Martin Seeger (@[email protected])

Dear OSS community on Mastodon, Every day I scroll through my feed and I see proud announcements like: > “First Alpha Relase of HyperTurboWidget available" or > “Version 2.7.1 now with improved glorb handlers!” or > “Flux Capacitor version 4.5 is out” 
 and I sit there wondering if I should be excited, terrified, or calling a licensed electrician. Don’t get me wrong, I love open source. I just have **no idea** what three quarters of these projects actually **do**. Are we talking about a web server? A file system? A middleware thingy that keeps the flux from overflowing into the space–time continuum? So, dear OSS developers of the world: When you announce a new release, please give us (your adoring but slightly confused audience) just a **tiny** bit of context. - Tell us what your software does. - Tell us why this release is cool. - Tell us what it requires to work. Example: > We are proud to announce Flux Capacitor version 4.5 is now avalaible. While it creates a nice wormhole to 1955, it requires an underlying gigawatt stack 1.21 to work reliably. Because nobody wants to cheer enthusiastically for “v2.7.1” while secretly Googling “what is a glorb and why does it need handling”. Yours truly, *Someone who wants to celebrate your achievements*

Infosec Exchange
@masek I'm linking directly to release notes, not a landing page. I don't think we need a "what is this thing" on every possible linked page when it's just a very very short click away. If that's too exhausting for someone, they can use another terminal lol. Its fine.
@masek (For example, the landing page, docs landing page, github landing page all include a blurb. The financial support page includes details about the org. I think it already very much holds hands)
@masek Also, this may come across as aggressive via text mediums I realize, but its not and I don't mean it that way.
@mitchellh niiiiiiice đŸ«¶
@mitchellh Nice! Now with search 🔎
@mitchellh I'm intrigued to try it, but I'm wondering if anyone else out there can vouch for the
at unofficial apt source from debian.griffo.io ? I'm using #Debian, and I'm a bit leery of unofficial apt repositories. (Ideally these packages could instead come from "extrepo":
https://linuxiac.com/how-to-use-extrepo-in-debian-to-manage-third-party-repositories/
)
How to Use extrepo in Debian to Manage Third-Party Repositories

Learn how to use Debian’s extrepo command to easily add, search, and manage external APT repositories without manual configuration.

Linuxiac
@mitchellh I think you might have missed a docs page there. Might be something that can get added to the release checklist?
@mitchellh Amazing updates!! Love the search feature.
@mitchellh I was in a holding pattern but I need this now.