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Lazyssh 0.3.0, published by Adembc, is a lightweight terminal-user-interface wrapper that simplifies routine Secure Shell operations without replacing the standard ssh client. Designed for system administrators, DevOps engineers, and developers who manage fleets of remote Linux or BSD servers, the program presents an interactive, keyboard-driven menu that lists discovered hosts, reads existing ssh_config files, and launches authenticated sessions in a dedicated pane. Because it remains in the terminal, it integrates naturally into scripting workflows, tmux/screen sessions, and CI pipelines that require quick visual host selection rather than memorized aliases. The single-binary distribution runs on any modern POSIX shell, consumes minimal memory, and adds no long-running daemons, making it suitable for jump boxes, recovery environments, or containers where resources are constrained. Version 0.3.0 is the first and therefore current release; it ships with monochrome theming, configurable keybindings, and automatic parsing of both OpenSSH-style configs and SSH-agent identities. Users can bookmark frequently accessed machines, filter hosts by tags or patterns, and pipe the chosen destination back to external automation tools, turning Lazyssh into a human-readable gateway between inventory files and unattended scripts. The utility sits in the Network & Remote Computing category, complementing traditional terminals rather than competing with full-blown connection managers that require graphical toolkits. Lazyssh 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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