Versions:

  • 1.30.0
  • 1.29.0
  • 1.28.0
  • 1.27.0
  • 1.26.0
  • 1.25.0
  • 1.24.0
  • 1.23.0
  • 1.22.0
  • 1.21.0
  • 1.20.0
  • 1.19.0
  • 1.18.0
  • 1.17.0
  • 1.16.0
  • 1.15.0
  • 1.14.0
  • 1.13.0
  • 1.12.0
  • 1.11.0
  • 1.10.0
  • 1.9.0
  • 1.8.0
  • 1.7.0
  • 1.6
  • 1.5
  • 1.4
  • 1.3
  • 1.2
  • 1.1
  • 1.0
  • 0.88
  • 0.87
  • 0.86
  • 0.84
  • 0.83
  • 0.82
  • 0.81
  • 0.80
  • 0.79
  • 0.78
  • 0.76
  • 0.75
  • 0.74
  • 0.73
  • 0.72
  • 0.71
  • 0.70
  • 0.68
  • 0.67
  • 0.66
  • 0.65
  • 0.64
  • 0.63
  • 0.61
  • 0.60
  • 0.59
  • 0.58
  • 0.57
  • 0.56
  • 0.55
  • 0.53

Kimi CLI, developed by Beijing Yuezhi Dark Face Technology Co., Ltd. and currently at version 1.30.0, is a command-line interface agent designed to streamline software development workflows and terminal operations. Released as the 62nd iteration of the tool, it falls within the Developer Tools category and is positioned as a lightweight yet powerful assistant for engineers who prefer keyboard-driven environments. By interpreting natural-language prompts or abbreviated commands, the utility can automate repetitive scripting tasks, scaffold project structures, invoke compilers, manage version-control commits, and monitor system resources without leaving the terminal window. Typical use cases include rapid prototyping in continuous-integration pipelines, on-the-fly dependency installation, batch file renaming across large codebases, and remote server maintenance through secure shell sessions. The agent maintains cross-session context, allowing developers to resume interrupted workflows, and exposes an extensible plugin interface so that teams can embed organization-specific macros or security checks. Because it operates entirely from the shell, Kimi CLI integrates cleanly with existing IDE toolchains, containerized build environments, and infrastructure-as-code repositories, reducing context switching and accelerating deployment cycles. The software is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always delivering the latest version, and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.

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