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Horizon 0.2.2, published by Peter Rekdal Khan-Sunde, is a GPU-accelerated terminal board that reimagines command-line work by spreading multiple terminal sessions across an infinite canvas instead of confining them to rigid tabs or windows. Designed for developers, DevOps engineers, and system administrators who routinely juggle numerous shells, SSH connections, and log streams, the application renders each terminal as a freely draggable and resizable panel that can be zoomed, grouped, and visually organized in real time. The hardware-accelerated engine keeps scrolling, tiling, and animation smooth even when dozens of concurrent sessions are active, while built-in workspace snapshots let users save and instantly restore complex panel layouts for recurring projects. Remote-host definitions can be stored alongside local shells, enabling one-click SSH launches that inherit the chosen preset geometry, and session persistence ensures that long-running tasks survive application restarts. Because every panel remains a standard PTY, Horizon integrates cleanly with existing dotfiles, shell hooks, and agent-based automation scripts, making it equally suitable for interactive coding, container orchestration, CI monitoring, and collaborative screen-sharing workflows. Two public versions have been released so far, with 0.2.2 representing the latest stable milestone. The software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are served through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always supplying the newest build and supporting batch installation alongside other applications.
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